W. E. B. Du Bois: A Reader [1 ed.] 0805032649, 9780805032642

The essential writings of Du Bois have been selected and edited by David Levering Lewis, his Pulitzer Prize-winning biog

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Boston Public Library

Digitized by the Internet Archive in

2017 with funding from

China-America

Digital

Academic

Library

(CADAL)

https://archive.org/details/webduboisOOdavi

E. B.

Du

A Reader

Bois

ALSO BY DAVID LEVERING LEWIS King:

A

Biography

Prisoners of Honor: District of Columbia:

The Dreyfus

A

Affair

Bicentennial History

When Harlem Was

in

Vogue

Harlem Renaissance: Art of Black America (contributor)

The Race

to

Fashoda:

Colonialism and African Resistance

W. E.

B.

Du

Bois:

Biography of a Race,

1868-1919 The Portable Harlem Renaissance Reader (editor)

W. E.

Du

B.

Bois

A Reader

EDITED BY

David Levering Lewis

A

JOHN MACRAE BOOK

HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY NEW YORK

Henry Holt and Company, Publishers since 1 1

,New

5

West

866

1

8th Street

New York

York,

Henry Holt®

1

10011

a registered trademark of

is

Henry Holt and Company, Copyright

©

Inc.

Inc.

1995 by David Levering Lewis All rights reserved.

Published in Canada by Fitzhenry 195 Allstate Parkway,

Librar)' of

Du

Bois,

W.

& Whiteside

Ltd.,

Markham, Ontario L3R 4T8.

Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Edward Burghardt), 1868-1963.

E. B. (William

[Selections. 1995]

W.

E. B.

Du

Bois

a reader

:

/

edited by David Levering Lewis.



1st ed.

cm.

p.

“A John Macrae book.” ---Includes bibliographical references.

ans.^ 5--'"

2. Africa.

I.

Lewis, David L.

1995

II.

CIP

dc20

ISBN 0-8050-3263-0 ISBN 0-8050-3264-9 (An Owl Book: Henry Holt books are

pbk.)

available for special promotions

and premiums. For

details contact:

Director, Special Markets.

First Edition

— 1995

Printed in the United States of America All

editions are printed

first

Title.

94-23482

'

on

acid-free paper. 00

1

3

5

7

9

10

8

6

4

2

1

3

5

7

9

10

8

6

4

2

pbk.

TO THE SOLUTIONS OF THE 2

1

ST

CENTURY

Contents

Introduction

I.

1

Race Concepts and the World of Color

Jefferson Davis as a Representative of Civilization

17

The Conservation of Races Of Our Spiritual Strivings Of the Meaning of Progress The Color Line Belts the World The First Universal Races Congress The Negro Problems The Cift of the Spirit The Black Man Brings His Gifts The Negro College On Being Ashamed of Oneself: An Essay on Race The Present Plight of the German Jew

20

34

42

44 48 54 59

68 Pride

76 81

Japanese Colonialism

83

Shanghai

85

Japan, Color, and Afro-Americans

86

Negroes Have an Old Culture

88

Gandhi and the American Negroes China and Africa

90 93

IX

1

28

5

Contents 11.

Personal Loyalties, Reflections, and Creative Pieces

Of the

101

Passing of the First-Born

Credo The Song of the Smoke The Case Howells and Black Folk

105

The Shadow of Years Charles Young The United Nations

115

So the Cirl Marries

128

Immortality

134

William Monroe Trotter

135

As the Crow Flies

138

I

Bury

109 114

125

127

My Wife

A Vista

III.

107

142

of Ninety Fruitful Years

Social Science and Civil Richts

Economics Methodology The Meaning of All This

153 1

162

The Laboratory in Sociology The Call of Kansas Reconstruction and

Its

59

at

165

Atlanta University

169 174

Benefits

American Negro Slavery by Ulrich Bonnell

193

Phillips

Race Intelligence

197

The Negro Encyclopedia The Propaganda of History

199 201

Apology

2

The Negro Family

The World and

IV.

in the

The Negroes

218

United States by E. Franklin Frazier

220

Africa

INSTITUTIONS: FAMILY,

1

ChURCH, COLLECE, BUSINESS

of F’armville, Virginia

'

231

Atlanta University

237

The Upbuilding of Black Durham The Negro Church

253

259

X

Contents

Negro Education Gifts and Education

A

Negro Student Century

at

261

270

Harvard

at the

End

of the Nineteenth

271

Women's Rights

V.

The Burden of Black Women The Black Mother

'

291

294

Hail Columbia!

Woman

295

Suffrage

The Damnation

297



of Women

299

Sex and Racism

VI.

313

Race, Class, and Leadership:

The Talented Tenth; Booker T. Washington; Marcus Garvey; Martin Luther King, )r.; and Others Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and The Parting of the Ways Back

A

Others

319 •

340

Lunatic or a Traitor

Marcus Garvey and the Is

329 333

to Africa

Leadership

'

NAACP

343

.

346

Vital

The Talented Tenth: Memorial Address The Present Leadership of American Negroes

347

Will the Great Gandhi Live Again?

358

Crusader Without Violence

361

VII.

Niagara, the NAACP,

and

The Niagara Movement: Address

Civil Rights

to the

Country

NAACP Social Equality

On

354

*

367 370

and Racial Intermarriage

372 375

Being Crazy

377

The Tuskegee Hospital The Amenia Conference Propaganda and World War

380 388

XI

1

Contents

Doubts Gandhi Plan

409

The Negro Sinee 1900: A Progress Report What Is the Meaning of “All Deliberate Speed”?

41

A

424

Program of Reason, Right and

Justiee for

Today

429

China

VIII.

A

419

White Supremacy and National Politics 441

Litany of Atlanta

Another Open Letter

to

Woodrow Wilson

445

Houston

448

The Arkansas Riots The Souls of Wliite

450 453

Folk

466

Haiti

Reduced Representation The Superior Race

in

467

Congress

470 478

Lynchings

An

Estimate of

FDR

From McKinley

IX.

The

to

Politics

480

Wallace:

My

Fifty Years as

an Independent

and Propaganda of Arts and Leiters 495

Jesus Christ in Texas

The Younger

A Negro Art

482

Literary

Movement

503

Renaissance

506

Negro Art Carl Van Vechten’s Nigger Heaven

Criteria of

509

On

516

Mencken

519

Passing by Nella Larsen

521

Black

X.

No More

Labor

by George

in Blv\ck

Come

S.

Schuyler

523

and White

North

529

The Negro and Radical Thought The American Federation of Labor and

531

Brothers,

XU

the

Negro

535

Contents

Marxism and the Negro Problem Behold the Land

538 545

Ser\ratist Solutions

XI.

The

Class Struggle

555

Segregation

557

Separation and Self-Respect

559

A

563

Negro Nation Within the Nation The C.M.A. Stores

571

Radical Thought: Socialism and Communism

XII.

Socialism and the Negro Problem

577

Russia, 1926

581

The Negro and Communism The Black Worker

583

Lifting

My

594

608

from the Bottom

Evolving Program for Negro Freedom

“There Must

Come

a Vast Social

Change

610 in the

United

619

States”

Negroes and the Crisis of Capitalism

The

in the

United States

China Today Application for Membership in the Communist United States of America

XIII.

To

626

Vast Miracle of

Africa, Pan-Africa,

the Nations of the

622

Party of the

631

and Imperialism 639

World

The African Roots of the War The Negro’s Fatherland “What Is Africa to Me?”

652

Africa for the Africans

660

A

662

Second Journey

642 655

to Pan-Africa

668

Little Portraits of Africa

The Pan-African Movement

Congresses:

The

Story of a

Crowing 670

xiii

Contents

The

On

Disfranchised Colonies

676

and Africa

683

Britain

Whites

XIV.

in Africa After

Negro Autonomy

685

War and Peace

f

697

Close Ranks

An

Essay Toward a History of the Black

War Germany and

Man

in the

698

Great

734

Hitler

Africa

738

Closing Ranks Again

739

The Negro and the War Negro s War Gains and Losses

742

XV.

The Cold War

Freedoms Road for Oppressed Peoples None Who Saw Paris Will Ever Forget

751

Opposition

757

Peace:

to Military Assistance

755

Act of 1949

Russophobia

768

The Marshall Plan The Trial My Campaign for Senator The Rosenbergs: Ethel and Michael, Robert and

773

On The

786 Julius

793

796

Stalin

Real Reason Behind Robeson

774

s

Persecution

Acknowledgments

798 801

XIV

Introduction

If,

as

William Edward Burghardt

Folk, prophesies, the

a

classic,

problem.

Du

is

The Souls of Black the problem of the he sees himself

reveals that Bois,

who knew

that

think

main

I

Dusk of Dawn:

may say without boasting that in the period from

factor in revolutionizing the attitude of the

My

caste.

stinging

hammer

blows

1

9 1 0 to 19301 was

American Negro toward

made Negroes aware

of themselves,

confident of their possibilities and determined in self-assertion. So that today

the words

In race,

he had

be modest about, expounds upon the meaning of a race concept near

the end of

I

1903

Dusk of Dawn,

virtually as the incarnation of that to

Bois's

problem of the twentieth century

color line, his 1940 memoir.

little

Du

its

common slogans among the Negro people are taken of my mouth.

much

so

bodily from

almost fabulous transcendence of place, time, and, ultimately, even

Du

Bois’s life holds large

Afro-America

s

and enduring meaning.

It

bears the imprint of

dilemmas from the post-Reconstruction Era of the

to the Civil Rights revolution of the early 1960s.

those American intellectuals

who

asserted that

He was among

early 1870s

the

first

of

hyphenated Americans were

not a cultural contradiction, as Theodore Roosevelt once said, but the em-

bodiment of enriching diversity. And claims a strong foundation,

Du

in order to give his cultural

and

aesthetic

Bois led the way, along with anthropologists

Franz Boas and Melville Herskovits,

in recovering the

major

lost civilizations

of sub-Saharan Africa, notably in books such as The Negro and Black Folk

Then and Now.

1

Introduction

Du

Bois was born in Massachusetts in 1868, the year of Andrew Johnson

impeachment, and died Washington, years,

ninety-five years later,

in the year of

Lyndon Johnson s

William Edward Burghardt

Du

s

on the eve of the March on

installation. In these ninety-five

Bois cut an astonishing swath through

four continents (his birthday was once a Chinese national holiday), pioneer-

ing in sociology and history while writing with confident provocation in other fields

of the social sciences and the humanities.

He was

the

Harvard

first

doctorate of his race, and his 1895 dissertation. The Suppression of the African

became

Slave Trade to the United States of America (1896),

graph of the influential Harvard Historical

Series.

the

NAACP

Educator, editor, propa-

and candidate

for the U.S.

York, he founded an incomparable journal of opinion.

was

forty-two, the scholarly review

socialist quarterly

tively influential

Freedomways

Phylon

Americans, black and white,

as

The

Crisis,

when he

cofounded the

and inaugurated the prospec-

at ninety-three.

Always a controversial figure, he espoused

such variety and seeming contradiction

New

Senate from

at seventy-two,

at ninety-two,

Encyclopedia Africana

The premier

he was one of the founders of the

as well as the architect of Pan-Africanism.

gandist, novelist, playwright,

mono-

His next book. The Phila-

delphia Negro, virtually invented the field of urban sociology. architect of civil rights in the United States,

first

as to

racial

and

political beliefs of

bewilder and alienate as

he inspired or converted. Beneath the

many

shifting

complexity of alliances and denunciations, nevertheless, there was a pattern, a congealing of inclinations, experiences, and ideas, more and more inclining

Du

Bois to a vision of society that became, in contrast to the lives of most

and women, increasingly the

civil liberties

solitary

radical as

he grew older,

until the

day came

maverick was supplanted by the full-blown Marxist.

man, awesome

to

most people, courtly with

associates,

men

when

A proud,

Du Bois was on

more than a dozen men during his long life. With women, Du Bois was more accessible; he was in fact enormously attractive to any woman and deeply loved by several. His monumental book. intimate terms probably with no

Black Reconstruction in America,

be sure.

One

is

dedicated to one inamorata

of the most vociferous male feminists of the early twentieth

century (his essay “The Damnation of Women” can Bois often

fell

— in Latin, to

somewhat

still

short of his principles in his

quicken pulses),

Du

most intimate dealings

women. The world according to Du Bois is one of facts deftly elided and masterfully molded in those almost hypnotically lyrical books he wrote about himself and his times. The more those early years in the little town of Great Barrington in the Berkshires are probed, the more they turn out to have been magnificently transformed by the seductive prose in which The Souls of Black Folk, Dusk of Dawn, A Pageant of Seven Decades, and the Autobiography are launched. A with

2

Introduction

grand prose wherein the “golden

river” flowing

near his birthplace

is

in fact

the highly polluted Housatonic River; the “mighty [Burghardt] clan” of his

mothers people

is

in reality a hardscrabble

band of peasant landholders

clinging to postage-stamp-size holdings; the dashing cavalier father, Alfred

Du

an army deserter and philanderer; and the “gentle and decent poverty” of his childhood is more often sharp and deep. Bois,

The

Du

is

partial truths

and blatant inaccuracies

to

be found in

much

of what

Bois writes about his formative years are fairly unimportant in themselves.

But they are essential

convey— that of

an understanding of the picture

to

Du

Bois wants to

the special and compelling vision of the classic Outsider

whose deep understanding comes from being simultaneously within and outside the dominant society. That Outsider vision came early, according to

Du

when

Bois,

repelled his overtures of friendship

suddenness that

a certain

newcomer to Great Barrington, at school: “Then it dawned upon me with

a female student, a white

I

was different from the others; or

mayhap,

like,

in

and longing, but shut out from their world by a vast veil.” Du Bois proceeds then to pour into The Souls of Black Folk these stunning words that ever since have been quoted as summing up the African predicament in heart and

America:

life,

peculiar sensation, this double-consciousness.

“It is a

feels his two-ness

unreconciled

— an

strivings;

strength alone keeps

it

American,

.

.

One

ever

Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two

a

two warring

.

ideals in

one dark body, whose dogged

from being torn asunder.”

By the time he graduated from Fisk University in 1888, Du Bois was inclined to draw no distinction between his own fate and that of his fellow African-Americans. “Through the leadership of men like myself and my fellows,” Du Bois prophesied while at Fisk, “we were going to have these enslaved Israelites out of the still enduring bondage in short order.” Soon after he graduated from Harvard in 1890, prophecy merged with mysticism as this midnight diary entry of our lonely hero, then a twenty-five-year-old University

my plans: to make a name in science, to make a name in literature, and thus to raise my race. Or perhaps

of Berlin graduate student, makes clear: “These are

to raise a visible

effusions

empire

in Africa.

.

.

.

And

if

I

perish



I

perish.”

Such

remind us that the difference between madness and inspiration

is

largely a matter of persuading others to share the vision.

At the

of

risk

long and rich

points— in

Du

some confusion, and

life,

Boiss

it

life

interpretive difficulties,

between that

with

Du

between

Du

is

certainly at the price of justice to this

useful to focus

on four developments— turning

by way of illustrating some of the controversies, the

and the

solutions.

The first concerns the controversies

Bois and the incomparably puissant Booker T. Washington and

Du

Marcus Garvey; the second deals 1934 and 1948 from the NAAGP; the

Bois and the charismatic

Boiss two explosive

exits in

3

Introduction

third

concerns his quixotic quest

for

foundation

money during

launeh the Encyclopedia of the Negro; and, foeuses on the hard turn to the Left during the 1950s. in order to

In both

Du

the late 1930s the fourth

finally,

Dusk of Dawn (1940) and the 1968 posthumous Autobiography,

Bois mentions his defeated candidature for the assistant superintendency

of the “eolored” schools of the District of Columbia merely as another passing illustration of Booker

however.

Du

Bois’s

Washington’s perfidiousness.

once

It

was

more

far

significant,

brilliant prospects as a sociology professor at Atlanta

The

University were rapidly receding by 1900.

1895 Atlanta

ehill of the

Compromise, symbolized by Booker Washington’s famous “cast down your buckets where you are” address, was bringing a philanthropie freeze to academically oriented African-Ameriean institutions like Atlanta University.

Compounding the

professional difficulties were

deep family

His infant

crises.

son Burghardt had died needlessly from diphtheria the previous

because no competent physieian could be found. His affeeted; she

now

years later that he tious, restive,

loathed Atlanta fiercely.

had suffered

a nervous

Du

wife’s sanit)'

summer had been

many

Bois himself eonfessed

breakdown during

this time.

Ambi-

deeply troubled, he counted on the assistant superintendency to

bring deliverance from family and professional

So anxious

to leave Atlanta

ton for a reference,

Du

was he

travail.

that, in his request to

Booker Washing-

Bois asked almost wheedlingly of his future nemesis (a

man he would soon characterize as the Machiavelli of the Blaek Belt), “Could 1

not serve both your cause and the general cause of the Negro at the national

capital better than that elsewhere?” Although, oddly,

survived,

Booker Washington sent

the District officials.

abruptly derailed.

Du Bois a recommendation to pass along to

Then, the promising plans

On March

appears not to have

it

for leaving Atlanta

If

you have not done

so,

1

from Booker

11, 1900, a curious letter arrived

Washington, fresh from conferring with powerful white

think

it

men

were

in

New

York:

not best for you to use the letter of

recommendation which 1 have sent you. Under the circumstances it would make your case stronger for you not to present the letter which 1 have .

given you for the reason that

it

.

would tend

.

to

put you in the position of

seeking the position.

Du

Bois

understandably blamed

the

Tuskegeean

for

the

lost

super-

intendency— who could be more deserving of the position than he, after all?— and Du Bois’s friends in Washington were to conduet a no-holds-barred unsuccessful campaign to capture the public school position for 1907. By then,

Du

Movement (the civil rights group comprised Tenth men and women) was already two years old.

Bois’s

of militant Talented

Du Bois until

Niagara

4

Introduction

The

avoided. That

Garvey

Garvey-Du

sad truth of the

Du

Bois feud

is

that

it

might well have been

Bois was viscerally, even aesthetically, repelled by

being intellectually deaf to anything the President

to the point of

General of Africa had

Marcus

to say,

is

well

known, of course. But

if the

Bookerite feud

was ultimately ideological, that with the Garveyites was ultimately one about power. The bottom line was not whether Garvey was a fool whose overpriced ships sank off Brooklyn piers or a lunatic Africa, or

whose

followers

wanted

to repopulate

even whether he was an anti-assimilationist whose preachings contra-

vened the upward-mobility optimism of middle-class African-Americans,

memorably dubbed by

Du

Bois

“The Talented Tenth.” Garvey may not have

been capable of expressing himself otherwise than in crude hyperbole, but most of his ideas could have been made compatible with Du Bois s. What was at stake

was not

ideas,

however, but the nature of the social class and national

origins of black leadership in America:

whether

it

Indians enrolled behind charismatic Garvey, or the

Du

would be parvenu West

homegrown

bourgeoisie

would be the NAAGP and the National Urban League, or the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) and its affiliates raising money from and issuing marching orders to

loyal to aloof

Bois.

Whether,

word,

in a

it

twelve million second-class American citizens. This explains,

apoplexy and vicious retaliation of

Garvey attacked them contained

much

The second years after

Du

truth,

Du

when

Bois and the Talented Tenth

and college snobs. What Garvey

as mulattoes

even though

think, the

I

said

was certainly an invidious caricature.

it

turning point comes in early 1934, twenty-four stupendous Bois had departed Atlanta University for the

New

York head-

new NAAGP. By then, he and his magazine The Crisis were widely perceived as the very embodiment of the NAAGP’s struggle for racial integration. He had sustained a drumfire of editorials denouncing the segregationist policies of Woodrow Wilson; hypocrisy of white philanthropists and quarters of the

duplicity of white suffragists; the barbarous repression in the South

and

racial

exclusiveness of organized labor in the North; the systematic exploitation of Africa

and Asia by Europe; the need

academic, religious, and public social equality for his

The

Crisis carried

for

high standards in African-American

He had demanded

life.

full political

and

people without compromise. But in January and March,

two

Du

Bois editorials bearing the inflammatory

titles

“Segregation” and “Separation and Self-Respect.” Since American Negroes

had

to live with segregation

advantage.

“It

is

Du

Bois called on ,them to turn

impossible ... to wait for the millennium. ...

continued, “the race-conscious black institutions race.”

and movements who

He added

quickly, “This

is

man

it

to their

It

is,”

cooperating together in his

will eventually

he

own

emancipate the colored

not turning back to the older program of

Booker T. Washington.”

5

Introduction

Du Bois’s program was meant to be a mild form of socialism that would buy time and resources for black America until the private enterprise system was profoundly modified.

He had argued vigorously at the NAACP s controversial

1933 Amenia Conference

“planned program

for a

tion ... in order that the laboring masses

them

a strong

for

using the racial segrega-

might be able

foundation for self-respect and social

to

have built beneath

uplift.”

anticipated, his editorials raised a firestorm, roiling the

As

Du

NAACP

in

Bois fully

an unpre-

cedented internal dispute and stupefying that supreme organization man, Walter Francis White, the Association’s integrationist executive secretary. But

why did he do

it?

Du

Bois

us that “by 1930,

tells

1

had become convinced

that

the basic policies and ideals of the Association must be modified and

changed.” As America appeared

to unravel, the Association’s general staff gave

only perfunctory attention to the deepening economic hardship assailing the great majority of black people

rather than to focus

plunge

on economic

in circulation figures of

from a peak 100,000 a month

NAACP’s

the

— electing Du

Marshall, then the

An

Du

emergency loans from

NAACP board of directors. Each week

memos from

NAACP’s

Wilkins and the young Thurgood

chief legal counsel, about office expenditures

autonomy. life

insurance wiped out,

is

it

credible that a

Bois decided to manufacture a suitably controversial departure?

early 1933 letter

John Hope, alludes

Du

beloved Crisis magazine (down

Bois’s

to 15,000) necessitated

His savings along with his disgusted

and lobbying

general budget and loss of editorial control to the adversarial

brought more hectoring

editorial

litigation

Furthermore, the Depression

strategies.

Walter White and Roy Wilkins and the

and

pursue

to

from

his

good friend and president of Atlanta University,

to previous discussions

make up

between them, cryptically hurry-

mind about relocating to Atlanta by the time of their next chat in New York. What Hope had in mind was for his good friend to chair the graduate program in sociology and help make Hope’s newly ing

Bois to

his

restructured. Rockefeller-financed institution into a great university. Rockefeller largesse to

American higher education

in those days

through the mighty Ceneral Education Board

make

life-and-death decisions about colleges

tenure negotiations with diately

of trustees,

“It

making

Du

a

its

— the CEB- which universities.

GEB,

When

word of

the philanthropy

GEB

deep misgivings.

could

imme-

trustee Trevor

he told the chairman of the Atlanta University board

might be well

to

consider an appointment for a special period,

might be seen how the matter progressed before definite commitment.” President Hope would almost surely have

say for a year, so that

.

Bois reached the

informed President Hope of

Arnett’s diary records that

told

Du

and

was funneled

it

Bois that something quite dramatic, unexpected

unexpected and ambiguous

editorials

— had

6

to

— like the tw'O wholly

be done

in order to effect a

Introduction

transition

Du

from the

fiery Crisis to the stately halls of a Rockefeller benefaction.

Bois certainly did not see his conduct as one of Jesuitical opportunism.

was simply taking the Negro race salaried,

Once

from which

to

to

another place, more congenial and better

continue the battle

for civil rights.

the tenure question at Atlanta University was resolved,

devoted himself

He

Du

Bois

graduate students, mastery of Marx, and writing Black

to

Reconstruction during 1933-34. These two years inaugurated a period in his

thinking that might be called Talented Tenth Marxism to 1948,

marked by political

— a period, from

1935

synthesis but also by significant relapses into solid

middle-class optimism. As late as 1948-49, there are orthodox

civil rights

Sunday New York Times Magazine foretelling the achievement of the American Dream “if the progress in race relations and Negro advancement which has marked the last thirty years can pieces in Phylon, Negro Digest, and the

be maintained for another generation.”

It

was

a

time of

terrific activity:

supervising graduate students; completing the Reconstruction

would gradually transform the study of the many, Russia, China, and Japan during 1936.

that

Now came

a third turning point in

Du

Bois’s

subject;

and

monograph

travel to

Ger-

career— the fulfillment of a

grand idea that had been with him since the turn of the century: the multi-

volume Encyclopedia of the Negro. “Cruel” is the word best describing the roller coaster involving Du Bois and the major foundations over the funding of his ambitious project of research and education. His old faith in the power of ideas, scientifically formulated, to make the world better had welled up again after a quarter-century of activism and propaganda.

The

encyclopedia

project generated preliminary endorsements and promises of collaboration

from

much

of the international scholarly community. After his 1935 funding

application was rejected by the Rockefeller-dominated private foundations comprising the General

revised

and elaborated the proposal

combine of four or five

Education Board, he greatly

for resubmission, the

Phelps Stokes

Fund

providing seed money. Growing national and even international support for

Du

Bois

among the

experts

began

to exert

formidable pressures for foundation

funding of the encyclopedia. Rather surprisingly, one of the General Education Board’s principal officers, Jackson Davis,

convert, introducing trustees,

had become an Encyclopedia

Du Bois to the right New York notables, stroking his own

and lobbying the Garnegie Gorporation

Garnegie portion of the

Du

for favorable action

on the

Bois grant application. Melville Herskovits, a

competitor for foundation funds, began to

fret

about

Du

Bois’s

bagging the

$250,000 research budget.

He need

not have worried. Glearly, an encyclopedia encompassing the

range of race and race relations in America and directed by

Du

Bois was to say

the least troubling to the custodians of social science orthodoxy.

7

full

The

seven-

Introduction

member

executive committee of the

and John D. Rockefeller beginning of

May

III

GEB — Raymond

B. Fosdick presiding

participating— rejected the Encyclopedia at the

1937. In his conference a few days later with Carnegie

Corporation president Frederick Keppel, CEB's Jackson Davis paradoxically

pleaded

for favorable

the most influential

Carnegie consideration of the project. “Dr.

Negro

‘This project would keep

in the

United

him busy

States,”

Du

Bois

is

Davis reminded Keppel.

for the rest of his life.” Predictably,

Carnegie declined. Within a remarkably short time, the study of the Negro (generously underwritten by the Carnegie Corporation) found a quite differ-

ent direction under a Swedish scholar then

unknown

in the field of race

relations,

one whose understanding of American race problems was

distinctly

more psychological and

The

precise

moment

less

economic than was

of preemption

is

Du

Bois

to

be

s.

recorded in a remarkable Septem-

Maynard Hutchins of the University of Chicago and Director Edwin Embree of the Rosenwald Fund: “Ed, somebody tells me that Keppel has rented the forty-sixth floor of the Chrysler Building and turned it over to a Swede named Gunnar Myrdal to make an elaborate study of negro education. What’s it all about?” “Bob, not Negro education, but the whole realm of the negro in American civilization [to] take the place of the proposed Negro Encyclopedia in which the Phelps Stokes Fund has been greatly interested.” When the president of the Phelps Stokes Fund wrote Du Bois in 1944 at the time of the publication of An American Dilemma that “there has been no one who has been quite so often ber 1939 exchange between President Robert

quoted by Myrdal than yourself,”

Du

Bois must have savored the irony.

Increasingly a whale in the Atlanta University puddle,

successor to the deceased president John

November 1944

NAACP

Bois caused the

considerable heartburn. In

the seventy-six-year-old professor was suddenly informed of

his voluntary retirement

the

Hope

Du

from the

university. Pressured

by several members of

board, Walter Wliite invited the septuagenarian back as an

my days of work were over,” Du Bois said. The Color and Democracy, Du Bois’s antiimperialist

ornament. “They assumed that

NAACP badly miscalculated.

book, reached his publisher in January 1945. That same month, his Chicago

Defender column, under the heading “Reason and Reality,” adumbrated a new toughmindedness, the beginning of the end of Du Boisian intellectual idealism.

the

“I

had,

I

program which was destined to settle Bois modestly reminded his readers. “It was no pat

believed, launched a

Negro problem,”

Du

panacea. ... In one respect alone was

world would allow

it

to

it

vulnerable, and that was whether the

be done.” Clearly, he believed the world of the

the Carnegie Corporation, and slavish Atlanta University trustees

GEB,

would not

allow his scholarship to serve as a beacon to American race relations.

Collaborating with Paul Robeson,

Max

8

Yergan, and Alphaeus

Hunton of

Introduction

the Council on African Affairs, he convened an April

1945 conference

(attended by Ghana's future president Kvvaine Nkruinah) at the

New

York

Schomburg Collection. This Harlem meeting compleGeorge Padmore — planned Pan African Congress meeting held

Public Library's

mented the

Manchester, England,

in

active presiding officer.

in

October, which

Bois also attended as an

Appointed by President Roosevelt

Delegate, along with Walter White and

founding of the United Nations

become

Du

in

ever sharper public attacks

May

upon

as a

Consulting

Mary McLeod Bethune,

Du

1945,

Bois began what

to the

would

the policies of an international body

whose charter was ambivalent about the rights of colonial peoples. Although the NAACP board had unanimously endorsed Du Bois's 1947 document “An Appeal

to the

A Statement on

the Denial of

Case of Citizens of Negro Descent

in the

ities

World:

Human

Rights to Minor-

United States of

in the

new NAACP board member and U.N.

America," by June 1948,

delegate

Eleanor Roosevelt made

it

and repeated attempts

U.N. General Assembly presentation “embarrassed”

at

plain that international circulation of the petition

her and the nation. By then,

Du

Henry Wallace's Progressive Party candidacy, denounced the Marshall Plan and NATO as capitalist aggression, and distributed an explosively detailed memorandum for restructuring

NAACP

Bois had virtually endorsed

national headquarters.

Already shaken in 1947 by historian Arthur Schlesinger,

magazine of Communist fired

Du

Du

Bois in

Bois.

infiltration, the

NAACP

September 1948. From then on,

Jr.'s

charges in Life

chose Mrs. Roosevelt and

it

was

This was the beginning of the fourth and

politics in earnest for

final

He

turning point.

plunged into the March 1949 Cultural and Scientific Conference

for

World

Peace, organized by Harlowe Shapley, Linus Pauling, and Lillian Heilman, chairing the writers' subcommittee with

Norman Mailer and A.

A. Fadayev at

the Waldorf-Astoria, delivering an electric closing speech at Madison Square

Garden. In April he gripped the huge audience attending the

Paris

World

Peace Conference, flaying the Atlantic Pact, Truman, and imperialism.

“Drunk with to hell in a

power,''

new

he exclaimed, the United

States

colonialism with the same old

was “leading the world

human

slavery

which once

ruined us; and to a third world war which will ruin the world.” Next stop,

Moscow,

for

another peace conference. Then, in 1950,

the U.S. Senate from

New York, on

the American Labor Party ticket.

million voters, 205,000 liked his campaign speeches Parallel with his

Senate race,

at eighty-two, a

Du

enough

run

Out

for

of

5

to vote for

him.

Bois also served as a director of the

new

Peace Information Center (PIC), which raised funds and provided speakers

to

garner 2.5 million signatures for the Stockholm Peace Petition for nuclear

disarmament. the

PIC

On

in the

July 13, 1950, Secretary of State

New York

Times.

The newspaper

9

Dean Acheson

also carried

Du

attacked

Bois's hard-

Introduction

“Have we come

hitting reply:

own

tion of our

Secretary of State, there

differences with the Soviet

he asked, “where, by declarano possibility of mediating our

to the tragic pass,”

Union? Does

it

is

not occur to you.

honest Americans who, regardless of their differences

On

February

1951, five days before

9,

his,

.

.

.

there are

Sir, that

hate and fear war?”

,

marriage to novelist-dramatist-

Graham, he, Elizabeth Moos, Abbott Simon, and two other officers of the PIC were indicted in Washington by the Justice Department as foreign agents. “If W. E. B. Du Bois goes to jail a wave of wonder will sweep around the world,” Langston Hughes wrote in the Chicago Defender. In fact, the case was so farcical that the judge threw it out in midtrial and thus deprived students of the Cold War of what would have been Du Bois s memorable testimony. Du Bois s published reaction, in his book In Battle for Peace (1952), struck

activist Shirley

a philosophical chord. But, as his friends confirm, the experience

matizing.

What wounded him

so savagely

that,

with the exception of

Langston Hughes, librarian Dorothy

sociologist E. Eranklin Frazier, poet

Porter-Wesley, and perhaps a half

was

was trau-

dozen

Tenth ran

others, the Talented

for

numbers of working-class blacks and whites attended Du Bois fundraisers across the country. It was true that one brave columnist wrote

cover, while large

in the Pittsburgh Courier that

Du

Bois

.

.

else

.

it

will

“we have

be dangerous

to take a stand

for a

Negro

to

here and

belong

to

now with

Dr.

anything but a

church.” Nevertheless, the fact was that the Talented Tenth had waffled and

cowered.

The emotional impact

of the trial-experience

made Du

foundly pessimistic about the cause that had engaged his long that

he concluded

that, for the sake

but especially in the Third World talism were

fair.

alone would

Dismissing

lift

enemies were

Bois pro-

life. It

was

now

of underdeveloped peoples everywhere



— all tactics that contained American capi-

civil rights

advances, he concluded that socialism

Africans in America. Thus, because the enemies of his

his friends in Africa

and

Asia, neither Marxism's doctrinal

shortcomings nor the Soviet Union’s 1956 rampages in Eastern Europe shook

Communist commitment. His passport restored, Du Bois and his second wife, Shirley Graham, spent 1959 in red carpet travel through Eastern his evolving

Europe, the Soviet Union, and China, adding

to his

1959 Lenin Peace Prize

honorary doctorates from ancient universities. In a private Kremlin talk with Nikita Khrushchev, he persuaded the Soviet premier to create immediately

Academy

the Institute of African Studies in the

On

October

petitioned the

1,

of Sciences.

1961 (the anniversary of the Russian Revolution),

Communist

Party of the United States for

Du

membership. “To-

have reached a firm conclusion,” his letter reads in language that sounds weirdly wrong. “Capitalism cannot reform itself; it is doomed to day,

I

destruction.”

Why

did he do

it

at this

time— at

10

Bois

now self-

ninety-three, five years after

Introduction

Khrushchevs revelations of Stalin-era crimes and the Soviet invasions of Hungary and Poland, three years after the court-ordered return of his own passport,

and two years

act that

imposed

freedom bus

into the Sino-Soviet split?

self-exile in

West Africa

What was the meaning of an

just as

lunch-counter

foreshadowed the beginning of the end of the

rides

segregation in America that

Du

Bois had spent his

splendidly mischievous admission at the end of his explanation.

“I

would have been hailed with approval

my

said. “At seventy-five

own

life

he came

Homeric

last,

cluded that

if

I

had died

partial

he

at fifty,”

death was practically requested.” His affronted ego

to see as

one

in

served only to prove the rule of racism.

one

if

was only a

Bois's

He had the intellectuals towering impatience with fools.

relished controversy.

His

life

racial

Du

fighting?

life

and

sit-ins

which

The

his exceptional

urge to

thumb

achievements

make

his nose, to

gesture of defiance, proved irresistible. Finally, he con-

the problem of the century was the problem of the color line,

its

solution could be found only in a strong Third World.

Du

advancement of the so-called “darker peoples” would come through wise policies based on scientific knowledge. In the sunset of his days, however, he came to believe in economic revolution and political force. Integrated lunch counters and public schools were fine in themselves, but pathetically insufficient to solve the problem of In the early days,

Bois had believed that

the color line in America, he believed.

King,

Jr.,

was something of an enigma

therefore,

Montgomery Bus

the 1955

The appearance for

Boycott, an agnostic

admitted that he had expected to

live to see

Du

and

of Martin Luther

Bois.

Musing about

anticlerical

many things,

Du

Bois

but never a militant

Baptist preacher. Interestingly, Martin Luther King's earliest assessment of

W.

Du

E. B.

Stride

Bois's

when he wrote in for an aristocratic elite who would

concept of leadership was

Toward Freedom

that

it

was “a

tactic

just as severe

themselves be benefitted while leaving behind the ‘untalented' 90 per cent.” King’s courage

and the

first

Du

Bois admired, but, even as lunch counters were integrated

federal civil rights act since Reconstruction enacted (1957),

Du

Bois predicted deepening class conflict within black America and superficial

economic improvement at best in the lot of the great majority of black people. “This dichotomy in the Negro group, this development of class structure, was to be expected,” he wrote in In Battle for Peace, “and will be more manifest in the future, as discrimination against Negroes as such decreases.”

As

for

Martin Luther King,

Du

Bois finally decided in late 1959 that the

nonviolent pastor was not Gandhi: “Gandhi submitted, but he also followed a positive

program

to offset his negative refusal to use violence.” King’s last

words about W. E. B. before his birth

Du

Bois were spoken in Garnegie Hall just a few weeks

own martyrdom. One hundred

— February 23,

1968

years to the day after

Du

Bois’s

— he, James Baldwin, Ossie Davis, and others gathII

Introduction

ered courageously to pay tribute to the

denounced plause, the

intellectual

and human

memory

of the great, widely

rights propagandist.

To thunderous

ap-

head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference declared

model of militant He defied them and though they heaped venom and

that the old warrior “eonfronted the establishment as a

manhood and

integrity.

seorn on him, his powerful voice was never

still.”

Philosophically, politically, psychologically,

and move on

to

embraced was

that, just as Africans in the

Du

Bois was ready to sign

another phase of Pan Africanism.

The

inflexible truth

up he

United States “under the corporate

wage group,” so the peoples of the developing world faced subordination in the global scheme of things capitalist. As he settled into the work of editing what had now become, through the benevolence of President Nkrumah of Chana, the rule of monopolized wealth

Encyclopedia Africana,

He was

vision.

.

Du

even thankful

him no

.

.

will

be confined

to the lowest

Bois was greatly consoled by his fully evolved that, wise,

aged humanist that he was, his

come wordsmith of grand meanings, he would sum up a sense,

life

had

left

to

eolleet a portion of his

headings

inadequaey.

On

is

to

to

fifteen

the other hand,

headings

— therefore

been able

I

it

not been for the

should have proba-

I

was born.”

expose oneself to serious reproaehes of arbitrariness and

“The Cold War”

Pieces”

Ever the

voluminous and multifarious writings under

it is

ideal rationale for selection of items

These

vision.

at the shrine of the established social

order and of the economic development into whieh

fifteen

“Had

upon me and enveloping me,

been an unquestioning worshipper

To

such a

in

the real significance of his

in the closing thoughts of his last autobiography:

race problem early thrust bly

alternative but to

life,

patently obvious that there could be

from the

vast

corpus of

Du

— ranging from “Africa, Pan-Africa, and to

“Personal

Loyalties,

Refleetions,

no

Bois’s work.

Imperialism”

and Creative

simply refleet the most viable schematic the editor has

to devise.

12

I

Race Concepts

and the World of Color

A

iJLs

the essay on Jefferson Davis delivered at his Harvard graduation makes

clear, the early

Du

Bois saw the world through a lens, strongly influenced by

contemporary European racism, that focussed on indelible group characIn

teristics.

its

most extreme form,

verged on chauvinism. “He

human

history ignores

who

Du

Bois's racial

romanticism sometimes

ignores or seeks to override the race idea in

and overrides the central thought of

all history,”

he

“The Conservation of Races,” his 1897 address to the American Negro Academy. In “Of Our Spiritual Strivings” and “Of the Meaning of Progress,” compelling essays in The Souls of Black Folk (1903), thundered famously

Du

in

Bois described the terrible tension at the heart of African-American

identity (“two souls,

two thoughts,

recaptured the star-crossed

shadow of

living in the strikingly

efforts at

slavery.

tw'o

unreconciled strivings”) and then

self-improvement of rural black folk

“The

First Universal

Races Congress,” a

sanguine account of a notable 1911 gathering of intellectuals

L.ondon; “The Black

Man

Brings His Cifts,” a

game 1925

unique cultural contributions; and “The Negro College,” text

still

on race

in the

curriculum, were expressive of a

that has profoundly influenced the ideas of

Du

in

fantasy about

a passionate

1933

Boisian racialism

contemporary

Afrocentrists.

As

time passed, his romanticism and chauvinism would be modified, becoming

more complex and class

finally evolving into a sophisticated synthesis in

and race functioned

w'ould always remain for

emancipation

Ashamed

as

which

mutually reinforcing constructs. Yet race pride

him

a

building block in group advancement; true

— psychic affirmation — was

impossible without

it

(“On Being

of Oneself” [1933]). Thus, in the articles “Japanese Colonialism”

15

Race Concepts and the World of Color

and Japan, Color, and Afro-Americans,” he professed admiration for Japan notwithstanding its imperialist aggression and warlike designs. In the end, Du Bois predicted in “China and Africa” (1959), that a powerful bond of color would draw the “darker world” into solidarity against the true racial malefactors

— the

imperialists of

Europe and America.

16

Jefferson Davis as

a

Representative of Civilization

Jefferson Davis was a typical Teutonic hero; the history of civilization during

millennium has been the development of the idea of the Strong Man of which he was the embodiment. The Anglo-Saxon loves a soldier — Jefferson the

last

Davis was an Anglo-Saxon, Jefferson Davis was a soldier. There was not a phase in that familiarly strange life that would not have graced a mediaeval

romance: from the

fiery

and impetuous young lieutenant who

stole as his

bride the daughter of a ruler-elect of the land, to the cool and ambitious politician in the Senate hall.

with the thin nervous

lips

So boldly and surely did that cadaverous

and flashing

eye, write the

first

line of the

figure

new page

of American history, that the historian of the future must ever see back of the

War

arm of one imperious man, who defied disease, trampled on precedent, would not be defeated, and never surrendered. A of Secession, the strong

soldier

and a

lover, a

statesman and a ruler; passionate, ambitious and indomi-

table; bold reckless guardian of a people's All

of Teutonic civilization, there Davis;

is

— judged by the whole standard

something noble

and judged by every canon of human

in the figure of Jefferson

justice, there

is

something

fundamentally incomplete about that standard. I

wish to consider not the man, but the type of civilization which his

represented:

its

foundation

is

coupled with the rule of might even modern

the idea of the Strong

Man — Individualism

— and

has

and

now hero

finally, as

Club.

It

made

made

the logic of

a naturally brave

and

advancing civilization by murdering

the crowning absurdity, the peculiar

has for a

Commencement

— now

this idea that

of a national disgrace called by courtesy, the Mexican War,

fighting to be free in order that this idea

it is

history, the cool logic of the

generous man, Jefferson Davis Indians,

life

champion of a people another people should not be free. Whenever

moment escaped from

address, Harvard University, 1890.

17

the individual realm,

it

has found an

Race Concepts and the World of Color

even more secure foothold

Man

Strong its

his

mighty Right

Under whatever

armies.

man,

and

in the policy

guise,

as race, or as nation, his life

a part of the

world

at the

Arm

and philosophy of the

however

can only

The

logically

vital principle

race to introduce a

To and

new

say that a nation

terms,

a

which

I

been handicapped by shortsighted national

of division of labor has been stifled not only in it

well nigh impossible for a

means of the

idea into the world except by

is

in the

Jefferson Davis represented:

and heroic character, and

These

brutality.

the advance of

this:

way of civilization is a contradiction in system of human culture whose principle is the rise of one race of another is a farce and a lie. Yet this is the type of civilization

cudgel.

on the ruins

mean

appear, as

has thus happened, that ad-

It

industry, but also in civilization, so as to render

new

may

a Jefferson Davis

expence of the whole: the overweening sense of the

in civilization has always

selfishness.

The

have become the Strong Nation with

and the consequent forgetting of the Thou. vance

State.

at the

it

represents a field for stalwart

same time

for

manhood

moral obtuseness and refined

striking contradictions of character always arise

when

a

people seemingly become convinced that the object of the world is not civilization, but Teutonic civilization. Such a type is not wholly evil or fruitless:

type

is

the world has

needed and

will

need

incomplete and never can serve

its

its

Jefferson Davises; but

best purpose until

complementary ideas. Whence shall these come? To the most casual observer, it must have occurred

such a

checked by

Rod

that the

its

of Empire

has in these days, turned towards the South. In every Southern country, however, destined to play a future part in the world in Southern North



America, South America, Australia, and Africa

— a new nation has a more or

firm foothold. This circumstance has, however, attracted but incidental notice, hitherto; for wherever the Negro people have touched civilization less

their rise has

glamour of

Man

been singularly unromantic and

history, the rise

crushing out

beside

Rome when

unscientific.

Through the

of a nation has ever been typified by the Strong

aii effete civilization.

That

brutality buried

aught else

descended golden haired and drunk from the blue north has scarcely entered human imagination. Not as the muscular warrior came it

the Negro, but as the cringing slave.

crushed

it

— the

Negro met

civilization

The Teutonic met

civilization

and was crushed by

the hero the world has ever worshipped,

it.

and

The one was

who gained unthought

of triumphs and made unthought of mistakes; the other was the personification of dogged patience bending to the inevitable, and waiting. In the histor)' of this people,

we

seek in vain the elements of Teutonic deification of Self, and Roman brute force, but we do find an idea of submission apart from cowardice, laziness, or stupidity, such as the world never saw before. This is the race which by its very

presence must play a part

in the

world of tomorrow; and

18

this

is

the race

whose

Jefferson

Davis as a Representative of Civilization

contend, has practically illustrated an idea which is at once the check and complement of the Teutonic Strong Man. It is the doctrine of the Submissive Man given to the world by strange coincidence, by the race of rise,

I



whose

rights, Jefferson

What then

is

Davis had not heard.

the change

to the idea of the

made in the conception of civilization, by adding Strong Man, that of the Submissive Man? It is this: the



submission of the strength of the Strong to the advance of all not in mere aimless sacrifice, but recognizing the fact that, To no one type of mind is it *

given to discern the totality of Truth,” that civilization cannot afford to lose the contribution of the very least of nations for its full developement: that not only the assertion of the I, but also to the submission to the Thou is the highest Individualism.

The Teuton the

Negro

stands today as the

as the

champion of the idea of Personal Assertion: peculiar embodiment of the idea of Personal Submission:



either, alone, tends to

an abnormal dev^elopment towards Despotism on the one hand which the world has just cause to fear, and yet covertly admires, or towards slavery on the other which the world despises and which, yet is not wholly despicable. No matter how great and striking the Teutonic type of

impetuous manhood may be,

must receive the cool purposeful “Ich Dien” of the African for its round and full developement. In the rise of Negro people and developement of this idea, you whose nation was founded on the loftiest ideals, and who many times forgot those ideals with a strange forgetfulness, have more than a sentimental a debt to

humanity

for this

it

interest,

more than

a sentimental duty.

Ethiopia of the Out-stretched Arm,

her beauty, patience, and her grandeur, law.

19

who

You owe

has

made

The Conservation

The American Negro sions as to the origins

has always

and

discussions of race with

felt

of Raees

an intense personal

interest in discus-

destinies of races: primarily because

which he

is

familiar,

have lurked certain assumptions

and moral

as to his natural abilities, as to his political, intellectual

which he

felt

were wrong.

minimize race created

all

has, consequently,

been led

to

status,

deprecate and

one blood God though it were the

distinctions, to believe intensely that out of

nations,

possibility of

He

back of most

and

to

speak of human brotherhood as

an already dawning to-morrow.

Nevertheless, in our calmer

moments we must acknowledge

that

human

beings are divided into races; that in this country the two most extreme types of the world’s races have met, and the resulting problem as to the future relations

of these types

epoch It

is

not only of intense and living interest to us, but forms an

in the history of

mankind.

necessary, therefore, in planning our

is

we

future development, that at times

rise

movements,

in

guiding our

above the pressing, but smaller

questions of separate schools and cars, wage-discrimination and lynch law, to

survey the whole question of race in

human

philosophy and

to lay,

on

a basis

of broad knowledge and careful insight, those large lines of policy and

higher ideals which

may form our

guiding lines and boundaries in the

practical difficulties of every day. For

must recognize the hard

how

matter world,

What

is

The

is

certain that

limits of natural law,

intense and earnest,

vain.

it

question, then,

which

is

and

all

that

human any

striving

striving,

no

against the constitution of the

which we must

seriously consider

is

this:

meaning of Race; what has, in the past, been the law of race development, and what lessons has the past history of race development to teach the rising Negro people? is

the real

American Negro Academy, Occasional

Papers, No. 2, 1897.

20

The Conservation of Races

When we thus come to inquire into the essential difference of races we find it

hard to

come

once

any definite conclusion. the past been proposed, as color,

at

differences have in

ments and language. And manifestly, differ widely.

.

.

.

Many

to

in

Unfortunately for

scientists,

human

each of these respects,

would be very easy

it

however, these

measure-

hair, cranial

All these physical characteristics are patent

they agreed with each other

of race

criteria

beings

enough, and

to classify

if'

mankind.

of race are most exas-

criteria

peratingly intermingled. Color does not agree with texture of hair, for many of the dark races have straight hair; nor does color agree with the breadth of the

head, for the yellow Tartar has a broader head than the German; nor, again, has the science of language as yet succeeded in clearing up the relative authority of these various and contradictory criteria. The final word of science, so

far, is

beings

that

we have

at least two,

perhaps three, great families of

— the whites and Negroes, possibly the yellow race.

Although the wonderful developments of grosser physical differences of color, hair

human

men

.

.

history teach that the

and bone go but

explaining the different roles which groups of

.

human

a short

way toward

have played in

Human

— subtle, delicate and elusive, though they

Progress, yet there are differences

may be — which have silently but definitely separated men

into groups.

While

these subtle forces have generally followed the natural cleavage of common blood, descent and physical peculiarities, they have at other times swept across

and ignored

At

these.

times, however, they have divided

all

human

beings into races, which, while they perhaps transcend scientific definition, nevertheless, are clearly defined to the eye of the Historian If this

be

true,

then the history of the world

thought of all generally of

history.

common

human

What, then,

history ignores is

a race?

It is

Sociologist.

the history, not of individuals,

is

but of groups, not of nations, but of races, and he override the race idea in

and

who

ignores or seeks to

and overrides the central

a vast family of human beings,

blood and language, always of

common

history, tradi-

and impulses, who are both voluntarily and involuntarily striving together for the accomplishment of certain more or less vividly conceived ideals tions

of

life.

Turning

to real history, there

can be no doubt,

first,

as to the

widespread,

nay, universal, prevalence of the race idea, the race spirit, the race ideal,

and

and most ingenious invention for human progress. We, who have been reared and trained under the individualistic as to

its

efficiency as the vastest

philosophy of the Declaration of Independence and the

phy of Adam Smith, are loath of human history. history sions.

and

to see

and loath

to

laisser-faire philoso-

acknowledge

this

patent fact

We see the Pharaohs, Caesars, Toussaints and Napoleons of which they were but epitomized expresour American impatience, that while it may have

forget the vast races of

We are apt to think in

21

Race Concepts and the World of Color

been true

in the past that closed race

made

groups

— wc

conglomerate America nous avons changer tout cela that,

history, that

here in

have changed

all

and have no need of this ancient instrument of progress. This assumption

of which the Negro people are especially fond, cannot be established by a careful consideration of history.

We find upon the world s stage today eight distinctly differentiated races, which History

in

word must be used. They are, the Slavs of eastern Europe, the Teutons of middle Europe, the English of Great Britain the sense in

us the

tells

and America, the Romance nations of Southern and Western Europe, the Negroes of Africa and America, the Semitic people of Western Asia and Northern Africa, the Hindoos of Central Asia and the Mongolians of Eastern Asia.

the

There

minor race groups,

Esquimaux and the South Sea

The it

are, of course, other

question

now

is:

What

is

Islanders;

.

.

as the

American

Indians,

.

the real distinction between these nations?

Is

the physical differences of blood, color and cranial measurements? Cer-

tainly that,

we must all acknowledge

that physical differences play a great part,

with wide exceptions and qualifications, these eight great races of to-day

follow the cleavage of physical race distinctions;

ences have followed mainly physical race tions

and

would

really define or explain the

.

lines, yet

.

.

But while race

no mere physical

deeper differences

differ-

distinc-

— the cohesiveness

and continuity of these groups. The deeper differences are spiritual, psychical, differences — undoubtedly based on the physical, but infinitely transcending them.

The

forces that bind together the

common

Teuton nations

are, then,

their

first,

more important, a common history, common laws and religion, similar habits of thought and a conscious striving together for certain ideals of life. The whole process which has brought about these race differentiations has been a growth, and the great race identity

and

characteristic of this

blood; secondly, and

growth has been the differentiation of

and

spiritual

mental differences between great races of mankind and the integration of physical differences.

f ’he age of nomadic tribes of closely related individuals represents the maximum of physical differences. They were practically vast families, and

many groups

there were as cities

as finnilies.

As the families came together

to

form

the physical differences lessened, purity of blood was replaced by the

requirement of domicile, and

who lived within the citv bounds became members of the group; i.e., there was a slight and all

v'

gradually to be regarded as

slow breaking

down

an increase of the

of physical barriers.

spiritual

became husbandmen, ideals of cities

life

began

for

this,

which the

and

'Fliis,

however, was accompanied by

social differences

between

cities.

This

merchants, another warriors, and so on.

different cities struggled

to coalesce into nations there

77

were

different.

cit}'

The

When at last

was another breaking down of

The Consen'ation of Races

which separated groups of men. I he larger and broader differences of hair and physical proportions uere not by any means ignored, but

barriers

color,

myriads of minor differences disappeared, and the sociological and historical races of men began to approximate the present division of races as indicated by physical researches. At the same time the spiritual and physical differences of race groups which constituted the nations .

.

.

each

striving,

message,

its

in

own

its

particular ideal,

nearer that perfection of

became deep and

way, to develop for civilization

which

human “one

shall help to

life for

far off

decisive.

particular

its

guide the world nearer and

which we

all

long, that

Divine event.”

This has been the function of race differences up to the present time. What shall be its function in the future? Manifestly some of the great races of today

— particularly the Negro race — have not as yet given to civilization the

message which they are capable of giving. I will not say that the Negro race has as yet given no message to the world, for it is still a mooted full spiritual

question

among scientists

its

origin;

as

it

if it

as to just

how far Egyptian

was not wholly Negro,

may, however, the

fact

still

civilization

was Negro

in

was certainly very closely allied. Be that remains that the full, complete Negro message it

of the whole Negro race has not as yet been given to the world: that the messages and ideal of the yellow race have not been completed, and that the striving of the mighty Slavs has but begun. The question is, then: How shall

message be delivered; how shall these various ideals be realized? The answer is plain: By the development of these race groups, not as individuals, this

but as races. ...

We cannot reverse history; we are subject to the same natural

laws as other races, and history



if

among

civilization

is

to

if

the Negro

is

ever to be a factor in the world

s

the gaily-colored banners that deck the broad ramparts of

hang one uncompromising

black, then

it

must be placed

there by black hands, fashioned by black heads and hallowed by the travail of 200,000,000 black hearts beating in one glad song of jubilee.



For this reason, the advance guard of the Negro people the 8,000,000 people of Negro blood in the United States of America must soon come to



they are to take their just place in the van of Pan-Negroism, then their destiny is not absorption by the white Americans. That if in America it is realize that

to

if

be proven

for the first

time in the modern world that not only Negroes are

capable of evolving individual

men

like Toussaint, the Saviour,

but are

nation stored with wonderful possibilities of culture, then their destiny ser\ale imitation of Anglo-Sa.xon culture, but a stalwart originality’

unswervingly follow Negro It

renders this attitude impossible; that our sole hope of saKation to lose

is

not a

which

shall

ideals.

may, however, be objected here that the situation of our race

being able

a

our race identity

in the

23

in

America

lies in

commingled blood of the

our

nation;

Race Concepts and the World of Color

and

we

any other course would merely increase the

that

call race prejudice,

which

friction of races

and against which we have so long and so earnestly

fought.

Here, then,

is

the dilemma,

and

it is

a puzzling one,

admit.

I

No Negro who

has given earnest thought to the situation of his people in America has failed,

some time in himself at some

at

Negro? Can possible

himself

to find

life,

What,

time:

be both? Or

am

after all,

is

it

and be an American?

If

I

at these cross-roads;

my

I

an American or

am

I

a

duty to cease to be a Negro as soon as

strive as a

I

Am

I?

has failed to ask

Negro,

am

not perpetuating the

I

White America? Is not my only possible practical aim the subduction of all that is Negro in me to the American? Does my black blood place upon me any more obligation to assert my nationality than German, or Irish or Italian blood would? It is such incessant self-questioning and the hesitation that arises from it, that is making the present period a time of vacillation and contradiction for the American Negro; combined race action is stifled, race responsibility is very cleft that threatens and separates Black and

and the best blood, the best talent, the best energy of the Negro people cannot be marshalled to do the bidding of the

shirked, race enterprises languish,

race.

They

stand back to

chooses to cloak his right?

Is this

Is it

make room

selfish deviltry

rational?

mission as a race

—a

development, or

is

Is it

and demagogue who

for every rascal

under the

veil

of race pride.

good policy? Have we

in

America

a distinct

and an opportunity

distinct sphere of action

self-obliteration the highest

end

to

for race

which Negro blood

dare aspire? If

we

cally, to

carefully consider

what race prejudice

really

is,

we

find

it,

histori-

be nothing but the friction between different groups of people;

the difference in aim, in feeling, in ideals of two different races;

if,

now,

difference exists touching territory, laws, language, or even religion,

manifest that these people cannot live in the collision;

but

if,

on the other hand, there

language and religion; then there

is

if

there

no reason why,

in

or three great national ideals different races

even

better,

might not

strive

many

territory

substantial

without

agreement

this it

is

fatal

in laws,

a satisfactory adjustment of

economic life, the same country and on the same street, two might not thrive and develop, that men of is

together for their race ideals as well, perhaps

than in isolation. Here,

riddle that puzzles so

is

same

it is

of us.

We

it

seems

to

me,

is

the reading of the

are Americans, not only by birth

and

by citizenship, but by our political ideals, our language, our religion. Farther than that, our Americanism does not go. At that point, we are Negroes,

members

of a vast historic race that from the very

but half awakening in the dark forests of first fruits

of this

new

its

dawn of creation has

African fatherland.

We

nation, the harbinger of that black to-morrow

24

slept,

are the

which

is

The Conservation of Races

yet destined to soften the whiteness of the Teutonic to-day.

We

are

tliat

people whose subtle sense of song has given America its only American music, its only American fairy tales, its only touch of pathos and humor amid its mad money-getting plutocracy. As such, it is our duty to conserve our physical powers, our intellectual endowments, our spiritual ideals; as a race we must strive by race organization, by race solidarity, by race unity to the realization of that broader humanity

men, but

in

which

freely recognizes differences

sternly deprecates inequality in their opportunities of develop-

ment. For the accomplishment of these ends

we need

race organizations: Negro

Negro newspapers, Negro business organizations, a Negro school of literature and art, and an intellectual clearing house, for all these products of the Negro mind, which we may call a Negro Academy. Not only is all this colleges,

necessary for positive advance,

Let us not deceive ourselves

absolutely imperative for negative defense.

it is

at

our situation in

this country.

Weighted with

heritage of moral iniquit}' from our past history, hard pressed in the

a

economic

world by foreign immigrants and native prejudice, hated here, despised there and pitied everywhere; our one haven of refuge is ourselves, and but one

means of advance, our own belief in our great destiny, our own implicit trust in our ability and worth. There is no power under Gods high heaven that can stop the advance of eight thousand thousand honest, earnest, inspired

united people. But criticising their

No

— and

own

faults,

people that laughs

anything but

itself

here

ever wrote

faith of our

march

a victorious host, a

— they

must be honest,

fearlessly

zealously correcting them; they must be earnest.

at itself,

Divine

the rub

is

and

its

and

ridicules

name

itself,

in history;

it

and wishes to God it was must be inspired with the

black mothers, that out of the blood and dust of battle will

mighty nation,

nations of earth a Divine truth that shall

must be united; not merely united

a peculiar people, to speak to the

make them

for the

free.

And such

a people

organized theft of political

spoils,

not united to disgrace religion with whoremongers and ward-heelers; not united merely to protest and pass resolutions, but united to stop the ravages of

consumption among the Negro people, united to keep black boys from loafing, gambling and crime; united to guard the purity of black women and to

reduce that

and united

vast

army of black

prostitutes that

is

today marching to hell;

determine by careful conference and thoughtful interchange of opinion the broad lines of policy and action for the in serious organizations, to

American Negro. dliis

aims

at

is

the reason for being which the American Negro

once

to

Academy

has.

It

be the epitome and expression of the intellect of the black-

blooded people of America, the exponent of the race ideals of one of the worlds great races. As such, the Academy must, if successful, he

25

Race Concepts and the World of Color

Representative in character.

(a)

.

(b)

.

Impartial in conduct.

(c)

.

Firm

in leadership.

.

.

.

In the field of Sociology an appalling

work

lies

before us.

we must

First,

unflinchingly and bravely face the truth, not with apologies, but with solemn earnestness.

echo

The Negro Academy ought to sound a note of warning that would

in every black

conquer

will

us;

we

cabin in the land: Unless we conquer our present vices they are diseased,

we

are developing criminal tendencies,

an alarmingly large percentage of our

The Negro Academy should crying with Garrison: will be heard.

I

men and women

and

are sexually impure.

stand and proclaim this over the housetops,

will not equivocate, I will not retreat a single inch,

The Academy should

seek to gather about

it

and I

the talented,

men, the pure and noble-minded women, to fight an army of devils that disgraces our manhood and our womanhood. There does not stand today upon God s earth a race more capable in muscle, in intellect, in morals, than the American Negro, if he will bend his energies in the right direction; if unselfish

he

will

Burst his birth

And And And In science

make

We

invidious bar

grasp the skirts of happy chance. breast the blows of circumstance.

grapple with his

and morals,

I

evil star.

have indicated two

Finally, in practical policy,

1.

s

believe that the

I

fields

of work for the Academy.

wish to suggest the following

Negro people,

as a race,

Academy Creed:

have a contribution

to

and humanity, which no other race can make. 2. We believe it the duty of the Americans of Negro descent, as a body, to maintain their race identity until this mission of the Negro people is accomplished, and the ideal of human brotherhood has become a practical possito civilization

bility. 3.

We

feasible

and

believe that, unless

and practicable

religious

4.

to

As a

two races

civilization

in

is

a failure,

such essential

it

political,

harmony as the white and colored people of America,

side by side in peace

each has

for

modern

economic, to

develop

and mutual happiness, the peculiar contribution which

make to the culture of their common countrv. means to this end we advocate, not such social

these races as

entirely

is

would disregard human

equilibrium as would, throughout

all

likes

and

dislikes,

equality between

but such a social

the complicated relations of

26

life,

give

The Conservation of Races

due and

just

consideration to culture,

be found under white or black

We

5.

believe that the

first

and

greatest step toward the settlement of the

— commonly called the Negro Problem —

in the correction of the immorality,

lies

Negroes themselves, which that only earnest social 6.

still

and moral worth, whether they

skins.

present friction betw'een the races

remains

and long continued

crime and laziness

as a heritage

efforts

from

slavery.

among

the

We believe

on our own part can cure these

ills.

We believe that the second great step toward a better adjustment of the

relations betu'een the races should

the

ability,

economic and

be

intellectual world,

and worth, regardless of race.

a

more

and

impartial selection of ability in

a greater respect for personal liberty

We believe that only earnest efforts on the part of

the white people of this country will bring

much needed

reform in these

matters. 7.

On

the basis of the foregoing declaration, and firmly believing in our

high destiny, we, as American Negroes, are resolved to able

way

for the realization of the best

strive in

every honor-

and highest aims, for the development of strong manhood and pure womanhood, and for the rearing of a race ideal in America and Africa, to the glory of God and the uplifting of the Negro people.

27

Of Our

Spiritual Strivings

and the other world there is ever an unasked question: unasked by some through feelings of delicacy; by others through the difficulty of rightly framing it. All, nevertheless, flutter round it. They approach me in a half-

me

Between

hesitant sort of way, eye

me curiously or compassionately, and then,

How does it feel man in my town; or,

to

saying directly.

colored

be

a

problem? they

question.

How

to a

does

simmer, be

feel to

it

I

know an

fought at Mechanicsville;

I

Southern outrages make your blood boil? At these reduce the boiling

say,

I

smile, or

may

as the occasion

problem?

a

Do

or.

am

instead of

excellent

not these

interested, or

To the

require.

real

answer seldom a word.

I

And yet, being a problem is a strange experience, — peculiar even for one who has never been anything else, save perhaps in babyhood and in Europe. It is

boyhood

in the early days of rollicking

one,

me.

a day, as

all in I

was

it

were.

a little thing,

remember

I

away up

that the revelation

well

the shadow swept across

New

England, where the dark

Housatonic winds between Hoosac and Taghkanic it

upon

when

in the hills of

wooden schoolhouse, something put

bursts

first

and

into the boys’

wee heads to buy

to the sea. girls’

In a

— ten cents a package — and exchange. The exchange pegirl, a tall newcomer, refused my card, — refused

gorgeous visiting-cards

was merry,

till

one

it

remptorily, with a glance. that

Then

it

dawned upon me with

was different from the others; or

I

mayhap,

like,

longing, but shut out from their world by a vast

down

to tear

that veil, to creep through;

contempt, and lived above

it

shadows. That sky was bluest time, or beat the years all

all this

when

at a foot-race, or

fine

it I

I

I

some,

I

tales that

swam

in

beyond

in

it

common

blue sky and great wandering

could beat

my

mates

theirs,

worlds

at

examination-

I

longed

for,

and

not mine. But they should not

would wrest from them.

Just

sick,

how would I

by telling the

my head, — some way. With other black boys the

was not so fiercely sunny: their youth shrunk into

or into silent hatred of the pale world about

From The

and

had thereafter no desire

all

to fade; for the

were

all,

life

even beat their stringy heads. Alas, with

contempt began

said;

I

suddenness

and

in heart

could never decide: by reading law, by healing the

wonderful strife

prizes,

held

in a region of

their dazzling opportunities,

keep these

do

them

I

veil.

a certain

Souls of Black Folk (190"?).

28

tasteless

sycophancy,

them and mocking

distrust of

Of Our Spiritual evervthing white; or wasted outcast

and

Strivings

Why

itself in a bitter cry,

God make me

did

an

mine own house? The shades of the prison-house closed round about us all: walls strait and stubborn to the whitest, but relentlessly narrow, tall, and unscalable to sons of night who must plod darkly on in resignation, or beat unavailing palms against the stone, or steadily, a stranger in

half

hopelessly, watch the streak of blue above.

After the Egyptian

and Indian, the Greek and Roman, the Teuton and Mongolian, the Negro is a sort of seventh son, born with a veil, and gifted with second-sight in this American world, — a world which yields him no true selfconsciousness, but only

other world.

him

see himself through the revelation of the a peculiar sensation, this double-consciousness, this sense of

It is

lets

always looking at ones self through the eyes of others, of measuring ones soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity. One ever feels his two-ness,

unreconciled

— ah

strivings;

strength alone keeps

The

it

history of the

American,

Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two

a

two warring

one dark body, whose dogged

ideals in

from being torn asunder.

American Negro

is

the history of this

strife,

— this

longing to attain self-conscious manhood, to merge his double self into a better and truer self. In this merging he wishes neither of the older selves to be lost.

He would

not Africanize America, for America has too

He would

world and Africa.

Americanism,

for

it

possible for a

man

a

to

message

is

for the world.

fellows, without having

the end of his striving: to be a co-worker in the

culture, to escape both death

and

He

be both a Negro and an

American, without being cursed and spit upon by his the doors of Opportunity closed roughly in his face. This, then,

the

not bleach his Negro soul in a flood of white

he knows that Negro blood has

simply wishes to make

much to teach

kingdom of

husband and use his best powers and his latent genius. These powers of body and mind have in the past been strangely wasted, dispersed, or forgotten. The shadow of a mighty Negro past

through the

isolation, to

of Ethiopia the Shadowy and of Egypt the Sphinx. Throughout history, the powers of single black men flash here and there like flits

and

tale

sometimes before the world has rightly gauged their brightness. Here in America, in the few days since Emancipation, the black man s turning hither and thither in hesitant and doubtful striving has often falling stars,

made

die

his very strength to lose effectiveness, to

weakness.

And

yet

it is

The double-aimed

not weakness,



it is

seem

like

absence of power,

like

the contradiction of double aims.

struggle of the black artisan

— on

the one

hand

to

escape

white contempt for a nation of mere hewers of wood and drawers of water, and

on the other hand

to

plough and

making him

nail

and dig

for a poverty-stricken

could only result

in

in either cause.

By the poverty and ignorance of

a poor craftsman, for

29

horde



he had but half a heart

his people, the

Negro

Race Concepts and the World of Color

minister or doctor was tempted toward quackery and demagogy;

and by the

made him ashamed

of his lowly

criticism of the other world, toward ideals that tasks.

The would-be

knowledge

his

black savant was confronted by the paradox that the

people needed was a twice-told tale

to his

white neighbors,

while the knowledge which would teach the white world was Greek to his

own

flesh

and blood. The innate love of harmony and beauty that set the ruder and a-singing

souls of his people a-dancing

the soul of the black

raised but confusion

the beauty revealed to

artist; for

him was

and doubt

in

the soul-beauty

of a race which his larger audience despised, and he could not articulate the

message of another people. This waste of double aims, two unreconciled

ideals, has

this

seeking to

satisfy

wrought sad havoc with the courage and

faith

and deeds of ten thousand thousand people, — has sent them often wooing

means of salvation, and at times has even seemed about to make them ashamed of themselves. Away back in the days of bondage they thought to see in one divine event the end of all doubt and disappointment; few men ever worshipped Freedom with half such unquestioning faith as did the American Negro for tw o centuries. To gods and invoking

false

him, so

far as

villainies, the

false

he thought and dreamed, slavery was indeed the

sum

of

all

cause of all sorrow, the root of all prejudice; Emancipation was

the key to a promised land of sweeter beautv than ever stretched before the eyes

of wearied his tears

Israelites. In

song and exhortation swelled one refrain

and curses the God he implored had Freedom

— Liberty; in

in his right

hand. At last

— suddenly, fearfully, like a dream. With one w ild carnival and passion came the message in his ow n plaintive cadences; — it

came,

O children!

“Shout,

Shout, youVe For

God

free!

has bought your

Years have passed away since then, national spectre

life,

sits

in

forty years of its

— ten,

libert)'!”

twenty,

fort}-;

forty years of

renewal and development, and yet the swarthy

accustomed

our vastest social problem:

of blood

seat at the Nation’s feast. In vain

do we cry to

this



“Tike any shape but

that,

and

my

firm nerv'es

Shall never tremble!”

he Nation has not yet found peace from its sins; the freedman has not yet found in freedom his promised land. Whatever of good may have come in \

these years of change, the

shadow of

Negro people, — a disappointment

all

a

the

more

bitter

rests

upon

the

because the unattained

was unhounded save by the simple ignorance of a low'ly people. he first decade w'as merely a prolongation of the vain search for freedom.

ideal I

deep disappointment

30

Of Our Spiritual the

boon

seemed ever barely to elude their grasp, — like a tantalizing willmaddening and misleading the headless host. The holocaust of

that

o’-the-wisp,

w ar, the

Strivings

terrors of the

Ku-Klux klan, the lies of carpet-baggers, the disorganizand the contradictory adv ice of friends and foes, left the

ation of industry,

bewildered serf with no

new watchword beyond the old cry for freedom. As however, he began to grasp a new idea. The ideal of liberty

the time flew,

demanded

attainment powerful means, and these the Fifteenth Amendment gave him. The ballot, wTich before he had looked upon as a visible sign of freedom, he now regarded as the chief means of gaining and for

its

perfecting the liberfy with which war had partially endowed him. not? Had not votes made war and emancipated millions? Had

enfranchised the freedmen?

done

A

all this?

Was anything

million black

men

And why not votes

impossible to a power that had

started with

renewed

zeal to vote

them-

selves into the

kingdom. So the decade flew away, the revolution of 1876

came, and

the half-free serf weary, wondering, but

left

still

inspired. Slowly

but steadily, in the following years, a new vision began gradually to replace the dream of political power, a powerful movement, the rise of another ideal to

guide the unguided, another the ideal of book-learning

know and

the power

test

pillar

of fire by night after a clouded day.

It

was

the curiosity, born of compulsory ignorance, to of the cabalistic letters of the white man, the longing ;

know. Here

at last

Up

path the advance guard toiled, slowly heavily, doggedly; only

seemed to have been discovered the mountain path to Canaan; longer than the highway of Emancipation and law, steep and rugged, but straight, leading to heights high enough to overlook life. to

those

the

new

who have watched and guided

the faltering feet, the misty minds, the

dull understandings, of the dark pupils of these schools

how

piteously, this people strove to learn.

statistician

wrote

down

It

know how

faithfully,

was weary work. The cold

the inches of progress here and there, noted also where

here and there a foot had slipped or some one had fallen. To the tired climbers, the horizon was ever dark, the mists were often cold, the Canaan

was always dim and

far

but

away.

If,

however, the

and

resting-place,

little

for reflection

and self-examination;

flattery

vistas disclosed as yet

no

goal,

no

criticism, the journey at least gave leisure it

changed the child of Emancipation

to

the youth with dawning self-consciousness, self-realization, self-respect. In those sombre forests of his striving his own soul rose before him, and he saw himself,

darkly as through a

veil;

and yet he saw

revelation of his power, of his mission.

He began

to

in

himself some faint

have a dim feeling

that, to

attain his place in the world,

time he sought to

he must be himself, and not another. For the first analyze the burden he bore upon his back, that dead-\\ eight

of social degradation partially masked behind a half-named Negro problem.

He

felt his

poverty; without a cent, without a

31

home, without

land, tools, or

Race Concepts and the World of Color

savings,

he had entered into competition with

To be

poor

a

man

is

hard, but to be a poor race in a land of dollars

bottom of hardships. letters,

rich, landed, skilled neighbors.

He

felt

the weight of his ignorance,

— not

is

the very

simply of

but of life, of business, of the humanities; the accumulated sloth and

and awkwardness of decades and centuries shackled his hands and Nor was his burden all poverty and ignorance. The red stain of bastardy,

shirking feet.

which two centuries of systematic stamped upon

his race,

meant not only the

also the hereditary weight of a

Negro

legal defilement of

women had

of ancient African chastity, but

loss

mass of corruption from white adulterers,

threatening almost the obliteration of the Negro home.

A people thus handicapped ought not to be asked to race with the world, but rather allowed to give alas!

all its

time and thought

to

its

own

social

problems. But

while sociologists gleefully count his bastards and his prostitutes, the very

soul of the toiling, sweating black despair.

man

is

darkened by the shadow of

a vast

Men call the shadow prejudice, and learnedly explain it as the natural

defence of culture against barbarism, learning against ignorance, purity against crime, the “higher” against the “lower” races. To which the Negro cries

and swears

homage

that to so

much

of this strange prejudice as

to civilization, culture, righteousness,

and

is

progress,

Amen!

founded on

just

he humbly bows

and meekly does obeisance. But before that nameless prejudice that leaps beyond all this he stands helpless, dismayed, and well-nigh speechless; before that personal disrespect

and mockery, the

and systematic humiliation,

ridicule

the distortion of fact and better

wanton license of fancy, the cynical ignoring of the and the boisterous weleoming of the worse, the all-pervading desire to

inculcate disdain for everything black, from Toussaint to the devil, this there rises a

— before

sickening despair that would disarm and discourage any nation

save that black host to

But the facing of so

whom

“discouragement”

vast a prejudice

is

an unwritten word.

could not but bring the inevitable

self-

questioning, self-disparagement, and lowering of ideals

which ever accompany repression and breed in an atmosphere of contempt and hate. Whisperings and portents came borne upon the four winds: Lo! we are diseased and dying, cried the dark hosts;

education, since

enforced

we must

we cannot

write,

our voting

always cook and serve?

this self-criticism, saying:

Be content

And to

is

vain;

what need of

the Nation echoed and

be servants, and nothing

more; what need of higher culture for half-men? Away with the black man’s ballot, by force or fraud, and behold the suicide of a race! Nevertheless, out



of the evil

came something

tion to real

of good,

— the more careful adjustment of educa-

the clearer perception of the Negroes’ social responsibilities, and the sobering realization of the meaning of progress. life,

So dawned the time of Sturm und Drang: storm and stress to-day rocks our little boat on the mad waters of the world-sea; there is within and

32

Of Our

Spiritual Strivings

without the sound of conflict, the burning of body and rending of soul; inspiration stri\'es with doubt, and faith wdth vain questionings. The bright ideals of the past,

physical freedom, political powder, the training of brains

and the training of hands, even the last growls dim and

all

these in turn have

overcast.

Are they

all

waxed and waned,

wrong, -all

false?

until

No, not



but each alone was over-simple and incomplete, the dreams of a credulous race-childhood, or the fond imaginings of the other world which does not know^ and does not vNant to know our power. To be really true, all that,

these ideals must be melted and wielded into one. The training of the schools we need to-day more than ever, the training of deft hands,



eyes and ears, and above

quick

the broader, deeper, higher culture of gifted

all

minds and pure hearts. The power of the ballot we need in sheer selfdefence,— else wdiat shall save us from a second slavery? Freedom, too, the long-sought,

work and

we

still

think, the

seek,

— the

freedom

freedom of

to love

and

life

aspire.

and limb, the freedom to Work, culture, liberty, — all

these w^e need, not singly but together, not successively but together, each growing and aiding each, and all striving toward that vaster ideal that swims

before the Negro people, the ideal of

human

brotherhood, gained through

the unifying ideal of Race; the ideal of fostering and developing the traits and talents of the Negro, not in opposition to or contempt for other races,

but rather in large conformity to the greater ideals of the American Republic, in order that some day on American soil two w^orld-races may give each to each those characteristics both so sadly lack. We the darker ones come

even now^ not altogether empty-handed: there are to-day no truer exponents of the pure human spirit of the Declaration of Independence than the

American Negroes; there is no true American music but the wild sw'eet melodies of the Negro slave; the American fairy tales and folk-lore are Indian and African; and, all in all, we black men seem tlie sole oasis of simple faith and reverence in a dusty desert of dollars and smartness. Will America be poorer

she replace her brutal dyspeptic blundering wdth light-hearted but determined Negro humility? or her coarse and cruel wit with loving jovial if

good-humor? Merely

or her vulgar

music wdth the soul of the Sorrow Songs?

a concrete test of the

Negro Problem, and the travail of souls wTose burden the

but

who

bear

it

in the

their fathers’ fathers,

name and

underlying principles of the great republic

spiritual striving of the

freedmen

s

sons

is

is

the

almost beyond the measure of their strength, of an historic race, in the name of this the land of is

in the

name

of

human

opportunity.

And now what have briefly sketched in large outline let me on coming pages tell again in many w^ays, with loving emphasis and deeper detail, that men may listen to the striving in the souls of black folk. I

33

Of

Once upon

time

a

Meaning

the

taught school in the

I

dark vale of the Mississippi begins to ghanies.

I

was a Fisk student then, and

beyond the

Veil

of Progress

hills

roll

and crumple

Fisk

all

of Tennessee, where the broad to greet the Alle-

men thought that Tennessee —

— was theirs alone, and in vacation time they sallied forth in

meet the county school-commissioners. Young and happy, I too went, and I shall not soon forget that summer, seventeen years ago. First, there was a Teachers’ Institute at the county-seat; and there distinguished guests of the superintendent taught the teachers fractions and spellbands

lusty

to

— white teachers in the morning, Negroes at night. A

ing and other mysteries, picnic

then, and a supper, and the rough world was softened by

now and

remember how — But I wander. day when all the teachers left the Institute and began

laughter and song.

There came hunt

a

for schools.

I

learn from hearsay (for

I

my mother

was mortally

the

afraid of

hunting of ducks and bears and men is wonderfully interesting, but I am sure that the man who has never hunted a country school has something to learn of the pleasures of the chase. I see now the white, hot

fire-arms) that the

roads lazily rise and

fall

me under the burning July sun;

and wind before

I

feel

the deep weariness of heart and limb as ten, eight, six miles stretch relentlessly

ahead; Yes.”

I

So

feel I

my heart sink heavily as

walked on and on

— horses

dered beyond railways, beyond stage tlesnakes,

where the coming of

died in the shadow of one blue

Sprinkled over

world by the little

hill

forests

and dale

and the

school. Josie told

me

rested

From The

were too expensive lines, to a

a stranger

lay cabins

it;

(

was an event, and

had wan-

men

lived

rat-

and

and farm-houses, shut out from the

There

she was a thin, homely hair.

I

girl

I

1903).

34

I

had gone

found

at last a

of twenty, with a

had crossed the stream

under the great willows; then

Souls of Black Folk

I

land of “varmints” and

rolling hills toward the east.

of

— until

hill.

dark-brown face and thick, hard

and

hear again and again, “Got a teacher?

I

at

Watertown,

to the little cabin in the lot

Of the Meaning where

Josie

was resting on her way

welcome, and

hearing

Josie,

school over the

hill;

to town.

my errand,

The gaunt farmer made me

me anxiously that they wanted

told

a

once since the war had a teacher been there; that — and thus she ran on, talking fast and loud, with

that but

she herself longed to learn,

much

of Progress

earnestness and energy.

Next morning

I

crossed the

tall

round

lingered to look at the blue and

hill,

yellow mountains stretching toward the Carolinas, then plunged into the wood, and came out at Josie’s home. It was a dull frame cottage with four rooms, perched just below the brow of the hill, amid peach-trees. The father

was a

quiet, simple soul,

mother was

different,

calmly ignorant, with no touch of vulgarity.

— strong, bustling, and energetic, with a quick,

tongue, and an ambition to

Two

There was

live “like folks.”

boys had gone away. There remained two growing

seemed

and two babies of to

indefinite age.

Then

crowd of children.

a

girls; a

shy midget of

there was Josie herself

be the centre of the family: always busy

berry-picking; a

restless

awkward, and eighteen; Jim, younger, quicker, and better

eight; John, tall,

looking;

The

little

at service, or at

nervous and inclined to scold,

like

She

home,

or

her mother, yet

her father. She had about her a certain fineness, the shadow of an unconscious moral heroism that would willingly give all of life to make faithful, too, like

life

broader, deeper, and fuller for her and hers.

afterwards,

and grew

to love

them

I

honest

for their

comfortable, and for their knowledge of their

own

saw

much

efforts to

of this family

be decent and

ignorance. There was with

them no affectation. The mother would scold the father for being so “easy”; Josie would roundly berate the boys for carelessness; and all knew that it was a hard thing to dig a living out of a rocky I

secured the school.

I

commissioners house with

remember

side-hill.

the day

I

rode horseback out to the

young white fellow who wanted the white school. The road ran down the bed of a stream; the sun laughed and the water jingled, and we rode on. “Come in,” said the commissioner,— “come in. Have a seat. Yes, that certificate will do. Stay to dinner. What do you want a month?” “Oh,” thought I, “this is lucky”; but even then fell the awful shadow of the Veil, for they ate first, then I — alone.

The schoolhouse was a corn.

It

springs.

sat in a lot

a pleasant

where Colonel Wlieeler used to shelter his fence and thorn bushes, near the sweetest of

log hut,

behind a

rail

There was an entrance where

rickety fireplace; great chinks

was scarce.

A pale

a door

between the

once was, and within,

logs served as

blackboard crouched in the corner.

three boards, reinforced at critical points, and

my

a massive

windows. Furniture

My desk was made

chair,

borrowed from the

landlady, had to be returned every night. Seats for the children

puzzled

and

me much.

I

was haunted by a

chairs, but, alas! the reality

of

New England vision

of neat

— these

little

desks

was rough plank benches without backs, and

35

Race Concepts and the World of Color

at

times without

legs.

They had

the one virtue of

making naps dangerous,



possibly fatal, for the floor was not to be trusted. It I

was a hot morning

when

late in July

down

heard the patter of little feet

the sehool opened.

sisters.

The

trembled when

the dusty road, and saw the growing row of

dark solemn faces and bright eager eyes facing me. First brothers and

I

came

Josie

and her

longing to know, to be a student in the great school

at

Nashville, hovered like a star above this

child-woman amid her work and worry, and she studied doggedly. There were the Dowells from their farm over

— Fanny, with her smooth black face and wondering eyes;

toward Alexandria,

Martha, brown and dull; the pretty girl-wife of a brother, and the younger brood.

There were the Burkes, — two brown and yellow lads, and a tiny haughtyeyed girl. Fat Reuben's little chubby girl came, with golden face and old-gold hair, faithful and solemn. ’Thenie was on hand early, — a jolly, ugly, good-

who

hearted

girl,

brother.

When her mother could spare her, ’Tildy came, — a midnight beauty,

dipped snuff and looked

slyly

after

her

little

bow-legged

with starry eyes and tapering limbs; and her brother, correspondingly homely.

And then

the big boys,

— the hulking Lawrences; the lazy Neills,

unfathered

sons of mother and daughter; Hickman, with a stoop in his shoulders; and the rest.

There they

sat,

nearly thirty of them, on the rough benches, their faces

shading from a pale cream to a deep brown, the

little

feet bare

and swinging,

the eyes full of expectation, with here and there a twinkle of mischief,

and the

my school,

and the

hands grasping Webster's blue-back spelling-book. fine faith the children

vellous.

We

had

read and spelled together, wrote a

listened to stories of the world

dwindle away, and

two very

wisdom of

in the

I

would

beyond the

start out.

rooms, and ask

why

I

would

I

loved

their teacher

little,

was truly mar-

picked flowers, sang, and

hill.

At times the school would

visit

Mun

Eddings,

who

lived in

Lugene, whose flaming face seemed ever ablaze with the dark-red hair uncombed, was absent all last week, or why I

dirty

little

missed so often the inimitable rags of

Mack and

Ed.

Then

the father,

who

worked Colonel Wheeler's farm on shares, would tell me how the crops needed the boys; and the thin, slovenly mother, whose face was pretty when

me that Lugene must mind the baby. “But we'll start them next week." When the Lawrences stopped, knew that the doubts of the

washed, assured again

I

old folks about book-learning had conquered again, and so, toiling

and getting

as far into the

cabin as possible,

I

— for a week or so.

On

Friday nights

sometimes

to

Doc

I

often

hill,

put Cicero “pro Archia Poeta”

into the simplest English with local applications,

them

up the

and usually eonvinced

went home with some of the children,—

Burke’s farm.

He was

36

a great, loud, thin Black, ever

Of the Meaning

of Progress

working, and trying to buy the seventy-five acres of hill and dale where he lived; but people said that he would surely fail, and the V'hite folks would get it all. His wife was a magnificent Amazon, with saffron face and shining hair,

uncorseted and barefooted, and the children were strong and beautiful. They lived in a one-and-a-half-room cabin in the hollow of the farm, near the spring.

The

front

there were bad kitchei^i

I

room was

full

chromos on the

was often invited

of great

and

walls,

to “take

fat

white beds, scrupulously neat; and

a tired centre-table. In the tiny

back

out and help” myself to fried chicken and

wheat biscuit, “meat” and corn pone, string-beans and berries. At first I used to be a little alarmed at the approach of bedtime in the one lone bedroom, but embarrassment was very deftly avoided. First, all the children nodded and slept, and were stowed away in one great pile of goose feathers; next, the

mother and the

father discreetly slipped

bed; then, blowing out the all

dim

were up and away before

Reuben

lived, they all

away

to the kitchen

while

I

went

to

they retired in the dark. In the morning

light,

thought of awaking. Across the road, where fat went outdoors while the teacher retired, because they I

did not boast the luxury of a kitchen. liked to stay with the Dowells, for they

had four rooms and plenty of good country fare. Uncle Bird had a small, rough farm, all woods and hills, miles from the big road; but he was full of tales, — he preached now and then, — and with his children, berries, horses, and wheat he was happy and prosperous. Often, to keep the peace, I must go where life was less lovely; for instance, I

Tildy s mother was incorrigibly

and herds of untamed

dirty,

Reuben’s larder was limited seriously,

wandered over the Eddingses’ beds. Best of all I loved to go to Josie’s, and sit on the porch, eating peaches, while the mother bustled and talked: how Josie had bought the sewing-machine; how Josie worked at service in winter, but that four dollars a month was “mighty little” wages;

how

Josie

never could get

insects

longed

far

girls

summers

looked

go away

I

finally,

to school,

but that

it

“looked like” they

how the

crops failed and the well

how “mean” some

of the white folks were.

enough ahead

was yet unfinished; and, For two

to

to let her;

lived in this

little

world;

at the hill in wistful longing,

Alexandria. Alexandria was “town,”

—a

it

was dull and humdrum. The

and the boys

fretted

and haunted

straggling, lazy village of houses,

churches, and shops, and an aristocracy of Toms, Dicks, and Captains.

Cuddled on the in three- or dirty.

The

hill to

the north was the village of the colored folks,

who

lived

four-room unpainted cottages, some neat and homelike, and some

dwellings were scattered rather aimlessly, but they centred about

the tw'in temples of the hamlet, the Methodist, and the Hard-Shell Baptist

churches. These, in turn, leaned gingerly on a sad-colored schoolhouse.

Hither

my

little

world wended

worlds, and gossip,

its

crooked way on Sunday

and wonder, and make the weekly

37

to

meet other

sacrifice with frenzied

Race Concepts and the World of Color

priest at the altar of the ‘'old-time religion.”

Then

melody and mighty

the soft

cadences of Negro song fluttered and thundered. I

have called

yet there

was among us but

common

from

my tiny community a joy

and

world, and so

half-awakened

a

its

common

grief, at burial, birth, or

isolation

hung between

some thoughts

us

and Opportunity.

when

together; but these,

and

it;

consciousness, sprung

common

wedding; from a

hardship in poverty, poor land, and low wages; and, above the Veil that

made

from the sight of

all,

All this

caused us

to think

were spoken

ripe for speech,

in

Those whose eyes twenty-five and more years before had seen “the glory of the coming of the Lord,” saw in every present hindrance or various languages.

help a dark fatalism bound to bring

mass of those

to

whom

slavery

world a puzzling thing:

and

yet

it

it

own good

time.

The

was a dim recollection of childhood found the

asked

little

ridiculed their offering.

and therefore sank

things right in His

all

of them, and they answ^ered with

Such

little,

paradox they could not understand,

a

into listless indifference, or shifflessness, or reckless bra-

vado. There were, however,

some — such

as Josie, Jim,

and Ben — to

whom

War, Hell, and Slavery were but childhood tales, whose young appetites had been whetted to an edge by school and story and half-aw^akened thought. Ill could they be content, born without and beyond the World. wings beat against their barriers,

And

— barriers of caste, of youth, of

their

weak

life; at last,

in

dangerous moments, against everything that opposed even a whim.

The ten

years that follow youth, the years

leading somewhere,

life is

school.

little

— these

when

first

the realization

were the years that passed

comes

after

I

left

that

my

When they were past, came by chance once more to the walls of I

Fisk University, to the halls of the chapel of melody. As

I

lingered there in the

and pain of meeting old school-friends, there swept over me a sudden longing to pass again beyond the blue hill, and to see the homes and the joy

school of other days, and to learn

and

how

life

had gone w ith

my school-children;

went.

I

Josie

was dead, and the gray-haired mother said simply,

of trouble since

youVe been

aw'ay.”

I

had feared

“WeVe had

for Jim.

parentage and a social caste to uphold him, he might have

some merchant reckless;

man had

a cultured

made

a venture-

West Point cadet. But here he was, angry wath life and and w hen Farmer Durham charged him with stealing wdieat, the old

escape the stones which the furious fool hurled after hey told Jim to run away; but he w'ould not run, and the constable to ride fast to

1

came

that afternoon.

It

miles every day to see his

Josie

heap

or a

him.

the two

With

a

grieved Josie, and great awTward John walked nine little

came back together

brother through the bars of Lebanon

in the

dark night.

emptied her purse, and the hoys

At

last

The mother cooked supper, and

stole away. Josie

38

jail.

grew thin and

silent, yet

Of the Meaning worked the more. The boys aw'ay there was

became

hill

do

little to

of Progress

steep for the quiet old father,

in the valley. Josie

helped them

and with the

to sell the old

farm, and they

moved

house w ith

rooms; Josie toiled a year in Nashville, and brought back ninety

six

nearer town. Brother Dennis, the carpenter, built a

new

house and change it to a home. \Vlien the spring came, and the birds twittered, and the stream ran proud and full, little sister Lizzie, bold and thoughtless, flushed with the passion of youth, bestowed herself on the tempter, and brought home a nameless child. dollars to furnish the

and worked on, with the

Josie shivered

wan and

— w^orked until, on a summer

tired,

then Josie crept I

paused

gone, live.

vision of schooldays

to

her mother

to scent the

day,

entered the valley.

I

with a face

some one married

hurt child, and slept

like a

breeze as

s

all fled,

another;

— and sleeps.

The Lawrences have

— father and son forever, — and the other son lazily digs in the earth to

A new young

wadow' rents out their cabin to

Baptist preacher now, but

rooms; and

Ella has

little

corn on the hot

hillside.

Across the valley

is

a

fear as lazy as ever,

I

growm

There

house

I

into a

Reuben. Reuben is a though his cabin has three fat

bouncing woman, and

are babies a-plenty,

did not

know

before,

and one

and there

is

ploughing

half-witted I

girl.

found, rocking

one baby and expecting another, one of my schoolgirls, a daughter of Uncle Bird Dowell. She looked somewhat worried with her new duties, but soon bristled into pride over her neat cabin

and the

her

tale of

thrifty

husband, the

horse and cow, and the farm they were planning to buy.

My log schoolhouse understand,

former

perched

my

poor

a

little

The

its

crazy foundation stones

and not

cabin,

door that locked.

Some

part of an old iron stove lay mournfully

window

far aw^ay,

on

The county owns school. As

sat

I

very glad, and yet

I

weary boulders, with three

and the

seats

I

peeped through the

more

were

still

familiar.

I

The

without backs.

hear,

session of I

felt

glad,



After two long drinks

the corner.

marked the

and every year there is a by the spring and looked on the Old and the New the lot now,

I

of the window-glass was broken, and

under the house.

feet,

six

still

thirty feet,

half reverently, and found things that were

blackboard had grown by about two

The

place stood Progress; and Progress,

board house, perhaps twenty by

a jaunty

windows and

gone. In

necessarily ugly.

is

of

site

w^as

I

started on.

remembered

There was the great double log-house on

the broken, blighted family that used to live there.

strong, hard face of the mother, with

its

wilderness of hair, rose before

me. She had driven her husband away, and while I taught school a strange man lived there, big and jovial, and people talked. I felt sure that Ben and Tildy would come

Ben

is

to

naught.from such a home. But

a busy farmer in

cared for

little

Tildy

Smith County, “doing

until last spring,

when

39

this

is

an odd world;

well, too,” they say,

a lover

married her.

for

and he had

A hard life the

Race Concepts and the World of Color

lad

had

meat, and laughed at because he was homely and

led, toiling for

crooked. There was

Sam

Carlon, an impudent old skinflint,

notions about ‘"niggers,” and hired

Then

a

summer and would

definite

not pay him.

the hungry boy gathered his sacks together, and in broad daylight went

Carlon

into

Ben

who had

boy flew

at

s

corn; and

him

when

upon him, the angry' murder and a lynching

the hard-fisted farmer set

like a beast.

Doc Burke

saved a

that day.

The story reminded me again of the Burkes, and an impatience seized me to know who won in the battle. Doc or the seventy-five acres. For it is a hard thing to make a farm out of nothing, even in fifteen years. So I hurried on, thinking of the Burkes. They used to have a certain magnificent barbarism about them that I liked. They were never vulgar, never immoral, but rather rough and primitive, with an unconventionality that spent guffaws, slaps

on the back, and naps

the misborn Neill boys.

hands. ders,

I

saw the

home

It

in the corner.

I

itself in

loud

hurried by the cottage of

was empty, and they were grown into

fat,

lazy farm-

of the Hickmans, but Albert, with his stooping shoul-

had passed from the world. Then

came

I

to the Burkes’ gate

and peered

through; the inclosure looked rough and untrimmed, and yet there were the

same fences around the old farm acres.

And

lo!

save to the

left,

where

lay twenty-five other

the cabin in the hollow had climbed the hill and swollen to a

half-finished six-room cottage.

The Burkes held a hundred acres, but they were still in debt. Indeed, the gaunt father who toiled night and day would scarcely be happy out of debt, being so used to it. Some day he must stop, for his massive frame is showing decline. The mother wore shoes, but the lion-like physique of other days was broken. The children had grown up. Rob, the image of his father, was loud and rough with laughter. of maiden beauty, half bowed, Little

down

tall

my school

Birdie,

and tawny. “Edgar

— “gone to work in

is

baby of six, had grown

to a picture

gone,” said the mother, with head

Nashville; he

Doc, the boy born since the time of

and

my

his father couldn’t agree.”

school, took

me

horseback

morning toward Farmer Dowell’s. The road and the stream were battling for mastery, and the stream had the better of it. We splashed and waded, and the merry boy, perched behind me, chattered and the creek next

laughed.

and

a

He showed me where Simon Thompson had bought a

home; but

She had married stream it

till

a

left

to a gate that

Bird’s.”

was a strange

youth and

daughter Lana, a plump, brown, slow

girl,

was not there.

man and a farm twenty miles away. We wound on down the

we came

was “Uncle

valley

his

bit of ground

I

did not recognize, but the

The farm was

stillness as

I

fat

boy

insisted that

with the growing crop. In that

little

rode up; for death and marriage had stolen

age and childhood there.

We sat and talked that night after the

chores were done. Uncle Bird was grayer, and his eyes did not see so well, but

40

Of the Meaning he was

still

jovial.

of the acres bought,

new guest-chamber added,

of the

five,

We talked

talked of death:

daughter, and

when

lifted

it

a

fell.

And

Uncle Bird to

her

told

home

me

bow-legged brother, working and saving, had bought mother.

me

lay hill

we

how, on a night

next morning she died in the

journey was done, and behind

last

over yonder, to escape

little

My

we

shadow hung over the other

she was to go to Nashville to school. At

Thenie came wandering back

the blows of her husband.

— one hundred and twenty-

of Marthas marrying, llien

Fanny and Fred were gone;

spoke of the neighbors, and as night like that,

of Progress

and

home

for their

dale,

that her

widowed

and Life and

How shall man measure Progress there where the dark-faced Josie lies? How many heartfuls of sorrow shall balance a bushel of wheat? How hard a Death.

thing

and

is life

strife

how human and

to the lowly,

and

yet



is it

the twilight of nightfall or the flush of some faint-

and

failure,

real!

And

all this life

dawning day?

Thus

sadly musing,

I

rode to Nashville in the Jim

41

Crow

car.

and love

The Color Line

Belts

the World

We have a way in Ameriea of wanting to be “rid” of problems. a desire to reach the best start a

new game. For our most

tient over

solve

and

instance,

and hear the because

it

last

fails to

of

most Americans are simply

it.

Of

all

in

possible attitudes this

most

America

is

problem of the twentieth century

tired

board and

and impa-

opening century,

viz.:

but a local phase of a world problem. “The is

the problem of the Color Line.” let

of the great nations of the day

economic expansion, but

the most dangerous,

is

significant fact of the

smile incredulously at such a proposition, but

The tendency

to clean the

much

problem, the Negro. They do not want to understand it, they want to simply be done with it

realize the

The Negro problem

it is

not so

sinister social

they do not want to

it,

largest solution as

It is

Many

us see. is

territorial, political

and

brought them in contact with darker peoples, so that we have to-day England, France, Holland, Belgium, in every' case this has

and the United States in close contact with brown and black peoples, and Russia and Austria in contact with the yellow. The older idea was Italy,

Portugal,

that the whites

lands, but this

would eventually displace the native races and inherit their idea has been rudely shaken in the increase of American

Negroes, the experience of the English in Africa, India and the West Indies, and the development of South America. The policy of expansion, then,

simply means world problems of the Color Line.

European imperial

politics

The

question enters into

and floods our continents from Alaska

to Pa-

tagonia.

when Charles Martel beat back the Saracens at lours, the white races have had the hegemony of civilization — so far so that white” and “civilized” have become synonymous in every-day speech; and I

,

men From

his

is

not

all.

Since 732,

have forgotten where civilization Collier’s Weekly,

started.

October 20, 1906, p.30.

42

For the

first

time in a thousand

The Color Line

years a great white nation has

white

been crossed yellow races

in is

is

a colored nation

War has marked an

epoch.

and been

The magic

of

already broken, and the Color Line in civilization has

modern times

certain.

follow in time,

World

measured arms with

found wanting. The Russo-Japanese the word

Belts the

as

it

was

in the great past.

The awakening of the

That the awakening of the brown and black

no unprejudiced student of

awakening of these sleepy millions be

in

history

can doubt. Shall the

accordance with, and aided

great ideals of white civilization, or in spite of them

white attitude toward darker races; shall

43

this

by, the

and against them? This

the problem of the Color Line. Force and Fear have hitherto

Freedom and Friendship?

races will

is

marked the

continue or be replaced by

The F irst Universal Raees Congress

Of the

tw'o

thousand international meetings that have taken place

seventy-five years there have

been few that have

a

meeting may be viewed

touched the imagination

as

summer.

the Universal Races Congress of this

Such

so

in the last

in

many

lights; as a

meeting of widely

men, as a reunion of East and West, as a glance across the color line or as a sort of World Grievance Committee. Perhaps it was in part something of each of these. There was, however, one thing that this congress could do of

separated

inestimable importance. Outside the discussion of racial problems,

make

clear the present state of scientific

it

could

knowledge concerning the meaning

of the term “race.”

This the congress did and practically

no

this

was

its

most important work. There were

reports of new' anthropological knowledge.

ever, several reviews

and restatements

the science in the matter of

human

in

There were, how-

popular terms of the present dicta of

races, exprest with a clearness, force

and

authority that deserve especial mention.

The

scientific

men who

contributed papers to the congress, and w ho w^ere

with few exceptions there in person to take part in the discussions, w'ere, of them, of the Italy;

first

rank:

Von Luschan and Von Ranke,

many

of Germany; Sergi, of

Myers, Lyde and Hadden, of England, and Boas, of America, are

all

well

known; among the other speakers w'ere the Indian scholar. Seal; Lacerda, of Brazil; Eino of Erance, and Reinsch, of America. All those mentioned, save Boas, were present in person.

meaning of the statements made by these men one must not forget the racial philosophy upon which America has long been nursed. The central idea of that philosophy has been that there are vast and, for all Vo realize the full

practical purposes, unbridgeable differences

between the races of men, the

w hites representing the higher nobler stock, the blacks the lower meaner race. Between the lowest races (who are certainly undeveloped and probably From

Independent, 70 (August 24, 1911); 401-403.

44

The

First Universal

Races Congress

incapable of any considerable development) and the highest, range the brown and yellow peoples with various intermediate capacities.

The

proofs of these assumptions have been repeatedly pointed out; the

high civilization of the whites, the lack of culture among the blacks, the apparent incapacity for self-rule in many non-Europeans, and the stagnation of Asia.

The

reasons for this condition were variously stated:

some assumed

separate development for each race, while others spoke as tho the various races represented different stages in the same general development, with

thousands of years between, the Negro remaining nearest the ape, the whites furthest from the common ancestor.

Had these assumptions remained merely academic opinions it would not be necessary to recall them, but they have

spread and decisive political action

become the scientific sanction for wide-

— like the disfranchisement of American

Negroes, the subjection of India and the partition of Africa. Under the aegis of this philosophy strong arguments have justified human slavery and peonage, conquest, enforced ignorance, the dishonoring of women and the exploitation of children. It was divine to enslave Negroes; Mexican peonage is the only

remedy for laziness; powerful nations must rule the mass of men who are not fit and cannot be fitted to rule themselves; colored women must not be expected to

be treated

world

As

toil for I

like white,

and

commerce

if

the luxury and ease of the white, this

sat in the great hall of the University

sweltering heat of a

is

make

the dark

but the law of nature.

of London,

I

wondered how many

and seven hundred who daily braved the midsummer meeting realized how epoch-making many

of those audiences of

five,

six

of the words quietly spoken there were, and

mining long and comfortably cherished

The

arranged so as to

is

how

far

they went toward under-

beliefs.

anthropologists were not rash in statement.

They spoke with

full

Europeans toward other races. Some, emphasize separate racial development for

realization of the prevalent attitude of like

Von Luschan, took

pains to

the sake of the “hassenkampf,” but he began with the sweeping assertion that

“mankind

Fair

is

one”:

and dark

races, long

come from one cially a

and short-headed,

stock. Favorable

good environment

.

.

.

intelligent

and

primitive,

all

circumstances and surroundings, espe-

caused one group to advance more quickly

than another.

Moreover both he and Von Ranke, bility

and others ridiculed the

possi-

of a “science” of race, or, indeed, of the possibility or desirability of

drawing complete said

Sergi

Von Luschan,

“The question of the number of human races,” lost its raison d’etre^ and has become a subject of

racial lines:

“has quite

45



Race Concepts and the World of Color

philosophical speculation, rather than of scientific research.

importance

to

know how many

races there are than to

It is

of no

more

know how many angels

dance on the point of a needle!”

made

Especial insistence was

accomplished

facts;

against regarding races as unchangeable

they were, in the words of Boas and Seal, “growing

developing entities” and “the old idea of the absolute

must evidently be given up; and with

stability

of racial types

the belief in the hereditary superiority

it

of certain types over others.”

This brought the discussion beings form a family thru which

to the crucial point, for it is

difficult to

granted that

draw absolute

lines, yet

human

does not

advancement of the various groups of men correspond on the whole with their physical characteristics? No proposition was more emthe present

phatically denied than this. In physique, said Seal, quoting Weisbach, “each

race has

share of the characteristics of inferiority,” and

its

men

arrange the main groups of

in

is

with

little

impossible to

an ascending scale of physical develop-

ment. Lyde, of Oxford, added that even color, which of racial barriers,

it is

doubt “entirely

is

today

made the greatest

a matter of climatic control.”

Nevertheless there are tremendous differences in the present condition of the various groups of

men — wdience do

they arise and

how permanent

are

they? Practically every anthropologist present laid the chief stress on environ-

ment in explaining these differences; not simply physical environment but the even more important social environment in which the individual is educated. Von Luschan traced dark-skinned primitive man from Southern Asia to the Negro and Negroid toward the Northwest, the Indo-European toward the North and the Mongol toward the Northeast. “We have thus the three chief mankind,” he

varieties of

said, “all

branching off the same primitive stock,

diverging from each other for thousands of years, but

complete of

unity, intermarrying in all directions Sir

fertility.”

primitive races like

and found

traces of

way

men were due

in wdiich the contrasting

and Asia had influenced the I

this early interpenetration

Negro blood from Asia

at first to physical

three forming a

without the slightest decrease

Reinsch show'ed that the differences that arose

branches of the

Harry Johnston emphasized

all

to Ireland.

among

of

Others

the scattered

environment, and pointed out

geography of Greece and Africa, and Europe

history of their inhabitants.

lad not this long difference of environment left traces in the characters of

races so ingrained as to be today practically ineradicable? Myers, of Oxford, asserted, in answ^er to this, that the

F^urope were today essentially the earth; that

such differences

environment and

mental characteristics of the majority of

same

as those of the primitive

as exist are

due

to present social

that therefore “the progressive

people must he conceded

if

peoples of the

and physical

development of all primitive

the environment can be appropriately changed.”

46

The

From Gustav

First Universal

Races Congress

the papers submitted to the congress and from his

own

studies,

Spiller, the secretary, stated that a fair interpretation of the scientific

evidence would support these propositions: 1.

It is

not legitimate to argue from differences in physical characteris-

tics to 2.

difference in mental characteristics.

Physical and mental characteristics of races are not permanent, nor are they modifiable only thru long ages.

On

the contrary they are

capable of being profoundly modified in a few generations by changes in education, public sentiment and environment generally. 3.

The

status of a race at

any particular time

offers

no index

as to

its

innate or inherited capacities.

As races

mixture

to race

and

that

many of these racial

all

the anthropologists said that there were

modern peoples were

all

more

it

was not clear whether

was unscientific

it

''pure”

or less mixt. Nevertheless while

mixtures were obviously beneficial,

mixtures would be. Certainly

no

all

to assert that mulattoes

and Eurasians were degenerate in the absence of all scientific data. Lacerda, of Brazil, showed the high proportion of mulattoes in the population of Brazil and the leading

role they

had played

in

emancipating the

ing the republic and in the literary and political

Bruce and

Sir

life

slaves, in establish-

of the day. Sir Charles

Sidney Olivier made somewhat similar statements concerning

the West Indies.

would be too much to say that all anthropologists today would subscribe the main conclusions of those who attended the Races Congress or that It

to

the doctrine of inevitable race superiority

good reason

is

dead.

On

to affirm with Finot, in the brochure

the other

hand there

which he gave

is

to the

congress:

The conception of races as of so many watertight compartments into which human beings can be crammed as if they were so many breeds of horses or cattle, has had its day. The word race will doubtless long survive, even tho it may have lost all meaning. From time immemorial men have taken far more pains to damn their souls than would have sufficed to save them. Hence they

will

The

it

congress

Urging the

to preserve this

and unjustifiable contempt

incites to hatred

replacing

be certain

most

for

scientific

term which

our fellow men, instead of

by some word implying the brotherhood of man. itself

vital

recorded

its

importance

judgment on the matter of race differences by

at this

race prejudice, as tending to inflict

juncture of history of discountenancing

on humanit)' incalculable harm, and

as

based on generalizations unworthy of an enlightened and progressive age.

47

The Negro Problems

It is

impossible to separate the population of the world accurately by race,

since that

is

no

by which

scientific criterion

to divide races. If

we

world, however, roughly into African Negroes and Negroids,

and

divide the

European

and American brown and yellow peoples, we have approximately 150,000,000 Negroes, 500,000,000 whites, and 900,000,000 yellow and brown peoples. Of the 150,000,000 Negroes, 121,000,000 live in Africa, whites,

Asiatic

27,000,000^ in the

new

world, and 2,000,000 in Asia.

What is to be the future relation of the Negro race to the rest of the world? The visitor from Altruria might see here no peculiar problem. He would expect the Negro race to develop along the lines of other human races. In Africa his

economic and

political

development would

restore

and eventually

outrun the ancient glories of Egypt, Ethiopia, and Yoruba; overseas the West

would become a new and nobler Africa, built in the very pathway of the new highway of commerce between East and West — the real sea route to Indies

India; while in the

United States

a large part of

its

citizenship (showing for

perhaps centuries their dark descent, but nevertheless equal sharers of and

would be the descendants of the wretched victims of the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth century slave contributors to the civilization of the West)

trade.

This natural assumption of a stranger of few present-day thinkers.

dismissed summarily.

On

finds,

however, lodging in the minds

the contrary, such an

Most persons have accepted

is

usually

that tacit but clear

modern

philosophy which assigns to the white race alone the

and assumes that other

races,

and

particularly the

outcome

hegemony

Negro

of the world

race, will either

content to serve the interests of the whites or die out before their

conquering march. This philosophy

is

be all-

the child of the African slave trade and

of the expansion of Europe during the nineteenth century.

The Negro From The Negro

slave trade

was the

first

(1915).

48

step in

modern world commerce.

The Negro Problems

followed by the

modern theory of eolonial expansion.

commerce were shipped enough black

as

long as the

traffic paid.

Slaves as an article of

When

the Americas had

laborers for their

immediate demand, the moral action of the eighteenth century had a chance to make its faint voice heard. The moral repugnance was powerfully reenforced by the revolt of the slaves in the West Indies and South America, and by the fact that North America early began to regard itself as the seat of advanced ideas in politics,

and humanity.

religion,

European capital began to find better investments than slave shipping and flew to them. These better investments were the fruit of the new Finally

industrial revolution of the nineteenth century, with

were also

in part the result of the

its

factory system; they

cheapened price of gold and

about by slavery and the slave trade

to the

silver,

brought

new world. Commodities other than

and commodities capable of manufacture and exploitation in Europe out of materials furnishable by America, became enhanced in value; the bottom fell out of the commercial slave trade and its suppression became gold,

possible.

The middle

of the nineteenth century saw the beginning of the

rise

of the

modern working class. By means of political power the laborers slowly but surely began to demand a larger share in the profiting industry. In the United States their

demand bade

The

labor vote, therefore,

live,

and when the

slave

fair to first

be halted by the competition of slave

confined slavery to limits

power sought

to

exceed these

in

which

it

labor.

could not

territorial limits,

it

was

suddenly and unintentionally abolished.

As the emancipation of millions of dark workers took place in the West Indies, North and South America, and parts of Africa at this time, it was natural to

assume

that the uplift of this

working

along the same paths

class lay

with that of European and American whites. This was the

first

suggested

Negro problem. Consequently these Negroes received partial enfranchisement, the beginnings of education, and some of the elementary rights of wage earners and property holders, while the independence of Liberia and Hayti was recognized. However, long before they were strong solution of the

enough

proper group leadership, the

new

twentieth centuries began to dawn. reign ol

enough for nineteenth and

to assert the rights thus granted or to gather intelligence

commercial

privilege

colonialism of the later

The new

colonial theory transferred the

and extraordinary profit from the exploitation of

the European working class to the exploitation of backward races under the political

domination of Europe. Eor the purpose of carrying out

European and white American working in this

new

exploitation,

class

and particularly were

was practically invited flattered

to share

by popular appeals

their inherent superiority to “Dagoes,” “Chinks,” “Japs,”

49

this idea the

and “Niggers.”

to

Race Concepts and the World of Color

This tendency was strengthened by the sion centered in Africa.

Thus

in

fact that the

1875 something

less

new

colonial expan-

than one-tenth of Africa

War and the exploration of the Congo led to new and fateful things. Germany desired economic expansion and, being shut out from America by the Monroe was under nominal European control, but the Franco-Prussian

Doctrine, turned to Africa. France, humiliated in war, dreamed of an African

empire from the Atlantic

to the

Red

Sea. Italy

became ambitious

for Tripoli

and Abyssinia. Great Britain began to take new interest in her African realm, but found herself largely checkmated by the jealousy of all Europe. Portugal sought

to

make good her ancient claim

peninsula.

It

Gongo

whole southern

who started to make the exploration and

was Leopold of Belgium

civilization of Africa

to the larger part of the

an international movement. This project

failed,

and the

Free State became in time simply a Belgian colony. While the project

was under discussion, the international scramble

for Africa

began. As a result

the Berlin Gonference and subsequent wars and treaties gave Great Britain control of 2, 1 0 1 ,4 1

1

square miles of African

territory, in

addition to Eg)^pt and

Sudan with 1,600,000 square miles. This includes South Africa, Bechuanaland and Rhodesia, East Africa, Uganda and Zanzibar, Nigeria, and British West Africa. The French hold 4,106,950 square miles, including

the Egyptian

North Africa (except Tripoli) west of the Niger valley and Libyan Desert, and touching the Atlantic at four points. To this is added the Island

nearly

all

of Madagascar.

The Germans have 910,150

square miles, principally in

Southeast and Southwest Africa and the Kamerun.

787,500 square miles in Southeast

The Portuguese retain and Southwest Africa. The Belgians have

900,000 square miles, while Liberia (43,000 square miles) and Abyssinia (350,000 square miles) are independent. The Italians have about 600,000 square miles and the Spanish

less

than 100,000 square miles.

This partition of Africa brought revision of the ideas of Negro uplift. Why was it necessary, the European investors argued, to push a continent of black workers along the paths of social uplift by education, trades-unionism, property holding,

and the

and the

rate of

electoral franchise

European

profit

would

when

the workers desired

suffer?

There quickly arose then the second suggestion problem. as

It

no change,

for settling the

Negro

called for the virtual enslavement of natives in certain industries,

rubber and ivory collecting

in the

Belgian Gongo, cocoa raising in Por-

tuguese Angola, and diamond mining in South Africa. This

new

slavery^ or

“forced” labor was stoutly defended as a necessary foundation for implanting

modern and

it

industry in a barbarous land; but

its

likeness to slavery

was too clear

has been modified, but not wholly abolished.

he third attempted solution of the Negro sought the result of the second by less direct methods. Negroes in Africa, the West Indies, and America were I

50

The Negro Problems

to

be forced

work by land monopoly,

to

and little or no education. In low w'ages, and not intelligent

taxation,

way a docile industrial class working for enough to unite in labor unions, w as to be developed. The peonage systems in parts of the United States and the labor systems of many of the African this

colonies of Great Britain and also illustrated in

many

illustrate this

phase of solution.^

It is

of the West Indian islands where w'e have a predomi-

nant Negro population, and

Land and

enfranchised.

Germany

population freed from slavery and partially

this

capital, how'ever,

managed amd monopolized

have

most part been so the black peasantry have been reduced to

that

for the

earn a living in one of the richest parts of the world. The problem is now' going to be intensified wTen the w'orld s commerce begins to sweep straits to

through the Panama Ganal. All these solutions

and methods, however, run directly counter to modern philanthropy, and have to be carried on with a certain concealment and halfhypocrisy wdiich

is

not only distasteful in

discovered and exposed by of

men and

liberal or religious

suddenly overthrown. These solutions

merging into says:

some

itself,

Negroes

a fourth solution, differ

from whites

which in their

is

but always liable to be

movement

of the masses

are, therefore, gradually

to-day very popular. This solution

inherent genius and stage of develop-

ment. Their development must not, therefore, be sought along European lines, but along their own native lines. Gonsequently the effort is made to-day

French Gongo and Sudan, in Uganda and Rhodesia possible the outward structure of native life intact; the king or

in British Nigeria, in the to leave so far as

chief reigns, the popular assemblies meet and act, the native courts adjudicate, and native social and family life and religion prevail. All this, however, is subject to the veto and

command

of a European magistracy supported by a

army with European officers. The advantage of this method is that on its face it carries no clue to its real working. Indeed it can always point to certain undoubted advantages: the abolition of the slave trade, the suppression of w'ar and feud, the encouragement of peaceful industry. On the other native

hand, back of practically

all

the determination to use the organization, the land, their

own

education

sound

economic motive — and the people, not for

these experiments stands the

benefit, but for the benefit of white Europe. is

seldom encouraged, modern

political

development

is

sternly

For

religious ideas are carefully limited,

frowmed upon, and industry

graded and changed to the demands of European markets. class of w'hite mercantile exploiters is allow^ed large liberty,

The most

and protected by a concerted attempt to deify white men the native and in their own imagination,^

such

White missionary

societies are

dollars a year in Africa

spending perhaps

as

as

if

is

de-

ruthless

not a free hand,

much

and accomplishing much good, but

51

reason

this

in the eyes of

as five million

at the

same time

Race Concepts and the World of Color

white merchants are sending

pean liquor

each year, and the debauchery of the almost unre-

into Africa

rum

stricted

traffic

twenty million dollars’ worth of Euro-

at least

goes far to neutralize missionary

effort.

mentioned solution of the Negro problems we may put the attempts at the segregation of Negroes and mulattoes in the United States and to some extent in the West Indies. Ostensibly this is “separation” of the races in

Under

this last

society, civil rights, etc. In practice all

the subordination of colored people of

it is

grades under white tutelage, and their separation as far as possible from

contact with civilization in dwelling place, in education, and in public

On

life.

Negro to-day is tremendous. Black Africa to-day exports annually nearly two hundred million dollars’ worth of goods, and its economic development has scarcely begun. The black West Indies export nearly one hundred million dollars’ worth of the other

hand the economic

significance of the

goods; to this must be added the labor value of Negroes in South Africa, Egypt,

and South America, where the result is blended in the common output of many races. The economic foundation of the Negro problem can easily be seen to be a matter of many hundreds of the West Indies, North, Central,

millions to-day, and ready to rise to the billions to-morrow.

Such figures and the Negro to-day as

facts give

peoples are being brought

What do Negroes

that

more

economic meaning of “Tropical Africa and its

slight idea of the

worker and industrial

a

economic influences

some

factor.

irrevocably every year into the vortex of the

sway the western world.”^

themselves think of these their problems and the attitude

of the world toward them? Eirst and most significant, they are thinking. There is

as yet

no great

there are centers

most

single centralizing of thought or unification of opinion, but

which are growing larger and

new

significant centers of this

Africa

and

in

America;

larger

thinking are, perhaps naturally, outside

United States and

in the

in the

followed by South Africa and West Africa and then,

America, with faint beginnings

The narrow

coming

West

more

Indies; this

is

vaguely, by South

Central Africa, Nigeria, and the Sudan.

comes will not, however, be merely a propaganda. Already the more far-seeing Negroes sense the

Pan-African racial

in East

movement when

and touching edges. The

unities: a unity of the

it

working

classes everywhere, a unity of the

men. The proposed economic solution of the Negro problem in Africa and America has turned the thoughts of Negroes toward a realization of the fact that the modern white laborer of Europe and colored races, a

new

unity of

America has the key to the serfdom of black folk, in his support of militarism and colonial expansion. He is beginning to say to these workingmen that, so long as black laborers are slaves, white laborers cannot be are signs in South Africa

and the United

standing betu'een the two classes.

52

States of the

free.

Already there

beginning of under-

The Negro Problems

In a conscious sense of unity

growing

There

interest.

is

among

colored races there

to-day only a

is

slowly arising not only a curiously strong brother-

hood of Negro blood throughout the

w^orld,

but the

common

cause of the

darker races against the intolerable assumptions and insults of Europeans has already found expression. Most men in this world are colored. A belief in

humanity means

a belief in colored

reasonable probability, be wTat colored w^orld to

come

into

men make

it.

will,

in all

In order for this colored

must the earth again be drenched in the blood snarling human beasts, or will Reason and Good Will prevail?

of fighting,

That such may be hope; for in races of

men. The future world

its

its

heritage,

true, the character of the

normal condition

it is

men: '‘Semper novi quid ex

at

Negro race is the best and greatest once the strongest and gentlest of the

Africa!”

Notes Sir Harr>’

1.

Johnston estimates 135,000,000 Negroes, of Inter-Racial Problems, p. 335.

2.

The South African

natives, in

an appeal

own 264,000,000

On top of this the Union Negroes 3.

The

say that in the

in

America. See

an astonishing way the

Union of South

Africa 1,250,000

acres of land, while the 4,500,000 natives have only 21,000,000 acres.

Parliament has passed a law making even the future purchase of land by

Clave writes

an ordinar)' white

pale face earns the 4.

They

show

live in

illegal save in restricted areas!

traveler

State]

24,591,000

to the English Parliament,

confiscation of their land by the English.

whites

whom

title

in the

man

Century Magazine

“Formerly [in the Congo Free was merely called ‘bwana’ or ‘Mzunga’; now the merest insect of a

of ‘bwana

Mkubwa’

(Llll, 913):

[big master].”

E. D. Morel, in the Nineteenth Century.

53

The How

Gift of the Spirit

the fine sweet spirit of blaek folk, despite superstition

and passion has breathed the soul of humiliK and forgiveness into the formalism and cant of American religion.

Above and beyond as true,

is

American

all

that

we have mentioned, perhaps

the peculiar spiritual quality life

and

civilization.

It is

least tangible

but

which the Negro has injected

hard to define or characterize

it

just

into

— a certain

spiritual joyousness; a sensuous, tropical love of life, in vivid contrast to the

New

cool and cautious

England reason;

a slow

and dreamful conception of

the universe, a drawling and slurring of speech, an intense sensitiveness to

— all these things and others like to them, tell of the imprint of

spiritual values

no gainsaying or explaining away this tremendous influence of the contact of the north and south, of black and white, of Anglo Saxon and Negro.

Africa

on Europe

One way

this

in

America. There

influence has been brought to bear

mingling of blood. But is

is

this

is

is

through the actual

the smaller cause of Negro influence. Heredity

always stronger through the influence of acts and deeds and imitations than

through actual blood descent; and the presence of the Negro in the United States quite apart

from the mingling of blood has always strongly influenced

the land.

We have spoken of its

have yet

to

influence in politics, literature and

art,

but we

speak of that potent influence in another sphere of the world’s

spiritual activities: religion.

America

early

became

a refuge for religion

glorious physical and mental freedom quietly of God

Pairope with

and

its

his world.

where

— a place of might)' spaces and silent

men might

sit

and think

Hither out of the blood and dust of war-wrecked

jealousies, blows, persecutions

and

fear of words

and thought,

came

Puritans, Anabaptists, Catholics, Quakers, Moravians, Methodists

Froni

he Gift of Black Folk (1924).

I

54

— all

.

The Gift of the

sorts

of

men and

Spirit

“isms” and sects searching for

God and

Truth

in the lonely

bitter wilderness.

came

Hither too

the Negro.

search for Truth, of the

strife

From

the

first

he was the concrete

test

of that

toward a God, of that body of belief which

is

the

essence of true religion. His presence rent and tore and tried the souls of men. Away with the slave! some cried but where away and why? Was not his



body there all

Africa

work and

for

and

let

But convert them

his soul

— what of his soul? Bring hither the slaves of

us convert their souls, this to

what?

to

freedom?

Impossible. Gonvert them, yes. But

and

ours. This

emancipation?

them

was quibbling and good

practical path, follow

Thus arose Ghurch began

let

to

God’s good reason

is

still

men

to

be slaves

felt

it,

but

for slavery.

being white

for their at least

men?

own good

here was a

it.

the great mission

movements to the blacks. The Gatholic it and not only were there Negro proselytes but black priests and an order of black monks in Spanish America early in the 16th century. In the middle of the 17th century a Negro freedman and charcoal burner lived to see his son, Francisco Xavier de Luna Victoria, raised to head the Bishopric of Panama where he reigned eight years as the first native Gatholic Bishop in America. In Spanish

America and

French America the history of Negro religion is bound up with the history of the Gatholic Ghurch. On the other hand in the present territory of the United States with the exception of Maryland and in

Louisiana organized religion was practically and almost exclusively Protestant and Gatholics indeed were often bracketed with Negroes for persecution.

They could not marry

Protestants at

one time

in colonial

South Garolina;

Gatholics and Negroes could not appear in court as witnesses in Virginia by the law of 1705; Negroes and Gatholics were held to be the cause of the

“Negro

plot” in

New York

The work then

in 1741.

of the Gatholic

Ghurch among Negroes began

in the

United States well into the 19th century and by Negroes themselves. In Baltimore, for instance, in 1829, colored refugees from the French West Indies established a sisterhood and academy and gave an initial endowment of furniture, real estate

and some $50,000

in

money. In 1842

in

New

Orleans,

Negro women gave their wealth to form the Sisters of the Holy Family and this work expanded and grew especially after 1895 when a mulatto, Thorny Lafon, endowed the work with over three quarters of a million four free

man, Golonel John McKee of estate to the Gatholic Ghurch for

dollars, his life savings. Later, in 1896, a colored

Philadelphia,

left a

million dollars in real

colored and white orphans.

Outside of these colored sisterhoods and colored philanthropists, the

55

Race Concepts and the World of Color

church hesitated long before

it

began any systematic proselyting among

Negroes. This was because of the comparative weakness of the church in early days and later

when

the Irish migration strengthened

it

the

new

Catholics

were thrown into violent economic competition with slaves and free Negroes,

and

their fight to escape slave

competition easily resolved

anti-Negro hatred which was back of Philadelphia and

New York.

It

much

was not then

church began active work by establishing engaging

in

it

until the 20th

only

six

Negroes and

new impetus was caused

Sisters of the Blessed Sacra-

and since the beginning of the 18th century

Negroes have been ordained

The main

century that the

a special mission for

by the benevolence of Katherine Drexel and the all this

to the

Catholic priesthood.

question of the conversion of the Negro to Christianity in the

United States was therefore the task of the Protestant Church and truth

must be

told, a task

which

it

did not at

fraught with perplexing contradictions: slaves

serious

of the rioting in Cincinnati,

nearly two hundred white priests. This

ment. Notwithstanding

itself into a

all relish.

The whole

Could Christians be

it

was,

if the

situation

slaves?

was

Could

be Christians? Was the object of slavery the Christianizing of the black

man, and when the black man was Christianized was the mission of slavery done and ended? Was it possible to make modern Christians of these persons whom the new slavery began to paint as brutes? The English Episcopal Church finally began the work in 1701 through the Society for the Propagation of the Cospel. It had notable officials, the Archbishop of Canterbury being its first president; it worked in America 82 years, accomplishing something but after all not very much, on account of the persistent objection of the masters. The Moravians were more eager and sent missionaries to the Negroes, converting large numbers in the West Indies and some in the United States in the 18th century. Into the

America

new Methodist Church which came

to

numbers of Negroes poured from the first, and finally the 18th century had at least one fourth of their membership

in 1766, large

the Baptists in

composed of Negroes, so that in 1800 there were 14,000 black Methodists and some 20,000 black Baptists.^ It must not be assumed that this missionary work acted on raw material. Rather it reacted and was itself influenced by a very definite and important body of thought and belief on the part of the Negroes. Religion in the United States was not simply brought to the Negro by the missionaries. To treat it in that way is to miss the essence of the Negro action and reaction upon American religion. We must think of the transplanting of the Negro as transplanting to the United States a certain spiritual entity,

and an unbreak-

able set of world-old beliefs, manners, morals, superstitions and religious

observances.

The

religion of Africa

is

primitive peoples, rising to polytheism

the universal

animism

or fetishism of

and approaching monotheism

56

chiefly.

The Gift of the

Spirit

but not wholly, as a result of Christian and Islamic missions. Of fetishism there is much misapprehension. It is not mere senseless degradation. It is a philoso-

Among primitive

phy of life. us,

Negroes there can be, as Miss Kingsley reminds no such divorce of religion from practical life as is common in civilized

lands. Religion

and fetish an expression of the practical recognition of dominant forces in which the Negro lives. To him all the world is spirit. Miss Kingsley says: It is this power of being able logically to account for everything that

is, I

is life,

believe, at the

back of the tremendous permanency of fetish

and the cause of many of the religions;

it is

relapses into

it

in Africa,

by Africans converted

also the explanation of the fact that white

men who

to other

live in the

where death and danger are everyday affairs, under a grim pall of boredom, are liable to believe in fetish, though ashamed of so doing. For the African, whose mind has been soaked in fetish during his early and most districts

impressionable years, the voice of fetish

comes At

is

almost

irresistible

first

sight

it

would seem

affliction

that slavery completely destroyed every vestige

movement among

of spontaneous social

rated; political authority

and economic

the Negroes; the initiative

were

masters; property, as a social institution, did not exist

indeed,

in the

deterio-

hands of the

on the plantation; and,

usually

sion for their

common

power of the

life,

thought, and striving. This

priest in the African state

the province of religion and medicine plantation system in fore, early

home had

assumed by historians and sociologists that every vestige development disappeared, leaving the slaves no means of expres-

it is

of internal

vast

when

to him. ”2

many important

became an important

still

is

not

strictly true;

the

survived; his realm alone



— remained

largely unaffected by the

particulars.

The Negro

figure

priest, there-

on the plantation and found

his

function as the interpreter of the supernatural, the comforter of the sorrowing, and as the one who expressed, rudely, but picturesquely, the longing

and disappointment and resentment of a stolen people. From such beginnings arose and spread with marvelous rapidity the Negro church, the first

Negro American social institution. It was not at first by any Christian Church, but a mere adaptation of those heathen rites

distinctively

means

a

which we roughly designate by the term Obe Worship or “Voodooism.” Association and missionary effort soon gave these rites a veneer of Christianity,

and gradually,

two centuries, the Church became Christian,

after

with a simple Calvinistic creed, but with clinging to the services. bases

itself

upon the

It is

this historic fact that the

its

extraordinary growth and

that in the United States today there

Negro

families.

of the old customs

still

Negro Church today

sole surviving social institution of the African father-

land, that accounts for

sixty

many

This

is

a

vitality.

Church

easily forget

organization for every

institution, therefore, naturally

57

We

assumed many

Race Concepts and the World of Color

functions which the other harshly suppressed social organs had to surrender; the

Church became

the center of amusements, of what

economic activity remained, of education, and of music and art. .

all social

.

Notes 1.

Charles C. Jones, Religious Instruction of the Negroes, Savannah, 1842.

2.

M. H.

3.

Atlanta University Publications, The Negro Church, 1903.

Kingsley, West African Studies.

58

little

spontaneous

intercourse, of

The Black Man Brings His Gifts

WeVe

got a pretty fine town out here in middle Indiana.

We

claim

fifty

thousand inhabitants although the census cheats us out of nearly half. You can t depend on those guys in Washington. The new Pennsylvania station has

gone up and looks big and clean although a bit empty on account of the new anti-loafing ordinance. There is a White Way extending down through the business section which makes us quite gay at night. Of course, we have just

Rotary, Kiwanis, the

Clubs. There are

six

Chamber

of Commerce and the Federation of Women

churches, not counting the colored

s

folks’.

somebody suggested we have an America s Making pageant just like New York. You see, we need something to sort of bring us together after the war. We had a lot of Cermans here and near-Cermans and we had to pull them up pretty stiff. In all, we had seven or eight races or nations, not Well,

year

last

counting the colored people.

We salute the

and many of us can sing The Star Spangled Banner without books. But we really need Americanization; a sort of wholesome getting together. So, as

I

have

said, last year the

is

Women s Clubs started the They appointed me and Birdie; Mrs.

Federation of

matter and got a committee appointed.

Cadwalader Lee (who

flag

an awfully aristocratic Southern lady);

Bill

Craves,

who

runs the biggest store; the editor of the daily paper and the Methodist preacher, who has the biggest church. They made me secretary but Birdie

we needed an impartial chairman who knew something about for, says she, “What with the Cermans, Poles, Scandinavians and

suggested that the subject, Italians,

everybody

From The

claim so

much

that there’ll

We

be nothing

left for

the real

met and considered the idea favorably and wrote to the state They sent us down a professor with a funny name and any number

Americans.” university.

will

Sun’e)’

(New

York), 53

(March

1,

1925);

59

655-657, 710.

Race Concepts and the World of Color

of degrees. that

may

seems that he taught sociology and “applied

It

be.

soon

“Fll bet he's a Jew,” said Birdie as

nothing against Jews but

I

just don’t like

ingly proper

and too low

for

anybody

as

she looked

at

him. “IVe got

them. They’re too pushing.”

who wore

First thing off the bat, this professor,

if

whatever

ethics,”

a cloak

and spoke exceed-

hear unless they were listening, asked

to

That took us Mrs. Cadwalader Lee

the colored people ought not to be represented.

surprise as

thought

it

we

hadn’t thought of

might be best

to

them

at all.

a bit

by

said she

have a small auxiliary colored committee and that

she would ask her cook to get one up.

“Well,” says

I,

after

we had

gotten nicely settled for our

first

meeting,

real

making America and who did it?” I had my own mind on music and painting and I know that Birdie is daft on architecture; but before we either of us could speak. Bill Graves grinned and “what

said,

the

is

first

thing

that’s

gone

to

“hard work.”

The chairman nodded and said, “Quite true, labor.” I didn’t know just what to say but whispered to Birdie that it seemed to me that we ought to stress some of the higher things. The chairman must have I

heard

me

human

because he said that

higher things rested on the foundation of

all

toil.

whose

“But,

labor?” asked the editor. “Since

working people,

isn’t

we

are

all

descended from

labor a sort of common contribution which, as

it

comes

from everybody, need not be counted?” “I

who

should hardly consent is

to that statement,” said

descended from

said to be

a

Mrs. Cadwalader Lee,

governor and a lord.

“At any rate,” said the chairman, “the Negroes were America’s

first

great

labor force.”

“Negroes!” shrilled Birdie, “but “1

we

can’t have them!”

should think,” said Mrs. Cadwalader Lee,

softly, “that

very interesting darky scene. Negroes hoeing cotton all

were thankful

to

and

we might have

that sort of thing.”

a

We

Mrs. Lee and immediately saw that that would be rather

good; Mrs. Lee again said she would consult her cook, a very intelligent and

exemplary person. “Next,”

said firmly,

I

“comes music.”

“Polk songs,” said the Methodist preacher. “Yes,”

“But

1

I

continued. “There would be Italian and

thought

“Sure,”

I

this

was

to

German and — ”

be American,” said the chairman.

answered, “German-American and Italian-American and so

forth.”

“There

ain’t

no such animal,”

says Birdie,

60

but Mrs. Cadwalader Lee

The Black

Man

I

Brings His Gifts

reminded us of Foster s work and thought w'e might have a chorus to sing Old Folks at Home, Old Kentucky Home and Nelly Was a Lady. Here the editor pulled out a book on American folk songs by Krehbiel or some such It

German name and

read an extract.

(I

had

to

copy

it

for the minutes.)

said:

The

only considerable body of songs which has

territory

now compassed by

the United States,

come I

into existence in the

might even say

in

North

America, excepting the primitive songs of the Indians (which present an entirely different aspect), are the songs of the former black slaves. In

Canada the songs of the people, said

to sing

still

language but

in

or that portion of the people that can be

from impulse, are predominantly French, not only in subject. They were for the greater part transferred to this

continent with the bodily integrity which they now possess. Only a small portion show an admixture of Indian elements; but the songs of the black

South are original and native products. They contain idioms which were transplanted from Africa, but as songs they are the product of slaves of the

American

institutions; of the social, political

ment within which

their creators

were placed

in

and geographical environAmerica; of the influences

which they were subjected in America; of the ences which fell to their lot in America. to

Nowhere which

sorrows and experi-

on the plantations of the South could the emotional life essential to the development of true folksong be developed;

is

nowhere

joys,

save

was there the necessary meeting of the spiritual cause and the simple agent and vehicle. The white inhabitants of the continent have else

never been in the state of cultural ingenuousness which prompts spontaneous emotional utterances in music.

This rather took our breath and the chairman suggested that the auxiliary colored committee might attend to this. Mrs. Cadwalader Lee was very nice

about

(She has such lovely manners and gets her dresses direct from New York.) She said that she was sure it could all be worked out satisfactorily. We it.

would need

a

number

that gifted cook, we’d

of servants and helpers. Well, under the leadership of

have a cotton-hoeing scene

hoeing they would sing Negro

ditties;

to represent labor

and while

afterward they could serve the food and

clean up.

That was

fine,

but

I

didn’t propose to be sidetracked.

“we don’t want to confine ourselves to folk songs. There is a lot of splendid American music like that of Victor Herbert and Irving Berlin.” The editor grinned. But the chairman was real nice and he mentioned “But,”

I

says,

several folks

I

never heard of

— Paine, Buck, Chadwick and DeKoven. And, of 61

Race Concepts and the World of Color

course,

know

I

of Nevin and

McDowell.

Still

that editor grinned

and

said,

and Harry Burleigh and W. C. Handy and Nathaniel Dett.” Here the preacher spoke up. “I especially like that man, Dett. Our choir

“Yes,

sang his Listen to the

“Oh,

“I

am

Christmas.”

last

Mrs. Cadwalader Lee, “and Burleigh’s Young Warrior was

yes,” said

one of the

Lambs

greatest of our

sure,” said the

war songs.”

Methodist preacher, “that our ehoir

will

be glad

to

furnish the music.”

“But are they colored?” asked the chairman, w ho had been “Colored?” we gasped. “Well, you see, each race was to furnish “Yes,”

we chorused, “but

this

is

its

own

silent.

contribution.”

wLite American music.”

Not on your life,” said the editor, who is awfully slangy. “Of course you know Burleigh and Dett and Handy are all Negroes.” I think you’re mistaken,” said Mrs. Cadwalader Lee, getting a bit red in the face.

But sure enough, the chairman said they were and we did not dare dispute him. He even said that Foster’s melodies were based on Negro musical themes. “Well,” said the preacher,

could sing Listen

to the

each other dubiously and

had

a

am

sure there are no Negroes in town

Lambs,” and the editor added, “And

your ehoir could render The at

“I

Memphis

Blues

just as

it

ought

I

who

hardly think

to be.”

We looked

saw right then and there that America’s Making small chance of being put on in our tow n. Somebody said that there was I

one of the colored churches that could sing this music, but Mrs. Cadwalader Lee reminded us that there would be insuperable difficulties if a choir in

we

tried to bring in obstreperous

social equality.

worker

It

and high-brow^ Negroes who demanded seems that one of these ehurches had hired a new social

—a

most objeetionable colored person who eomplained wTen Mrs. Lee called her by her first name.

“That editor

is

just

lugging the Negroes

in,” said

I

to Birdie.

seem to be lugging us in,” she replied, and she launched us architecture. From architeeture w e went to painting. There were Sargent

“'Hie Negroes into

and Whistler and Abbey. Birdie had seen Tanner’s Raising of Lazarus Luxembourg and suggested a tableau.

“We might get him York.”

We

were

to help,” said the editor. “He’s

thrilled, all

except Mrs. Lee.

blood,” she said coldly, “and besides,

dropped that and hurried

I

“I

in the

having an exhibit in New'

understand hedias Negro

do not think

much

of his work.”

We

to inventions.

Here, of course, America

is

preeminent and we must pick and choose.

62

First

The Black

the preacher asked

was so

Man

Brings His Gifts

what kinds of inventions we ought

to stress since

America

Graves w'anted to stress those which had made big the preacher wanted to emphasize those which had ‘hnade for

very' inv^entive. Bill

money,

w'hile

righteousness.

Birdie said she was strong for those

which were

really helpful

and the chairman suggested the telephone, things that had helped

travel,

labor-saving devices, etc.

named over a number of things and especially stressed the telephone. The editor mentioned Granville Wood as one who had helped to perfect the telephone but we didn’t listen. Fm sure he w^as a Negro. But in Well, w^e

spite of all, the

chairman spoke up again.

“Shoes,” he said.

Well, said

common

I,

I

didn

know'

t

we

invented shoes.

thought they were pretty

before America w'as discovered.”

“But American shoes are the best the chairman told us of the United

made

I

in the world,” said the editor,

and then

Shoe Machinery Gompany and how they

shoes.

“And,” he added, “that lasting machine which

is

at the

bottom of

their

success was invented by a Negro.” “I

don’t believe

Lee got pale

“Of ears —

it,”

said Birdie flatly, looking at Mrs.

Gadwalader Lee. Mrs.

this time.

course,” she said, “if you are just going to drag in the

“Still,” said

the editor, “we are after the truth, ain’t we?

true that Matzeliger invented the lasting

Negro by the

And

it is

certainly

machine and you wouldn’t want

marry Matzeliger, now w'ould you?” “Ain’t he dead?” asked Birdie, and Mrs. Gadwalader Lee doubted ought to be interested in anything as common as shoes. your

“I

sister to

if

we

should think automobiles and locomotives would express our genius

better.”

we

“Only,

“But

didn’t invent them,” said the editor.

w'e did invent a

method of

oiling

them while

in

motion,” said the

chairman.

“And

I’ll

bet a colored

man

did that,” said Birdie.

“Quite true,” answered the chairman. “His still

living in Detroit

“Might

I

ask,” said

and

I

talked with

him

name was

Mrs. Gadwalader Lee, looking the chairman

you yourself are of pure wTite blood?” We all the chairman over. He was of dark complexion and

He had

McGoy. He

big black eyes that did not smile

be any doubt about his being

wdiite.

63

is

the other day.”

face, “if

straight.

Elijah

started

his hair w'as

much; and

Wasn’t he

and

full in

w'e

the

looked

none too

yet there couldn’t

a professor in the state

Race Concepts and the World of Color

university

and would they hire

The chairman answered. do not know about the ‘‘I

called white.

Still,

a colored

man no

my blood

purity of

matter

how much he knew?

although

I

have usually been

one never knows,” and he looked solemnly

at

Mrs. Cad-

walader Lee.

Of course,

I

rushed

in,

angels being afraid, and cried,

“Dancing — we haven’t provided

for

dancing and we ought

to

have a

lot

of

that.”

Lovely,” says Birdie,

“I

could have folk-dancing

know

for

Mexican girl who can do the Irish and Scotch.” a

a

we

tango and

“The Negroes invented the tango as well as the cake walk and the whole modern dance craze is theirs,” said the editor. This time the preacher saved

countenance public dancing. traditional attitude

— We ”

dancing dancing.

We

of America

but in our

am

I

somewhat, but

dropped

lies in

her

I

could not

aware that our church has changed I

hastened to reassure

am

its

old-fashioned. If you are to have

him unanimously. We would have no

then and there.

it

now spoke

Mrs. Lee

“I’m afraid,” said he, “that

us.

up. “It seems to me,” she said, “that the real greatness

literature.

Not only the

great writers like Poe

and Lanier

There are the lovely legends of the mountain whites and, of course, the Uncle Remus tales. I sometimes used to recite them and would folk-lore.

my

not be unwilling to give

Negro

services to this pageant.”

dialect, aren’t they?”

“Yes,” said Mrs. Lee, “but

“But oughtn’t they

I

asked the editor, with vast innocence.

am

quite familiar with the dialect.”

be given by a Negro?” persisted the

to

editor.

“Certainly not; they were written by a white man, Joel Chandler Harris.” “Yes,” added the chairman, “he set them down, but the Negroes originated

them — they

are thoroughly African.”

Mrs. Cadwalader Lee actually sniffed. to

me

“I

am

sorry,”

she said, “but

that this matter has taken a turn quite different

purpose and I’m afraid

my

thing, to

“Oh,

I

may

thing ought to be a matter of the

common

is

too high-brow

people.

I

don’t

colored people take part so long as they don’t want to

do draw the

kill

the

an)^ay and

this

sure.

don’t know,” she whispered, “she

I

seems

from our original

not be able to take part.” This would

mind, but Birdie was not

it

sit

mind having

and

a

few

eat with us; but

I

on Jews.” Well, we took up education next and before we got through, in popped Booker 1 Washington. And then came democracy and it lookeddike everybody had had a hand in that, even the Cermans and Italians. The chairman line

.

two hundred thousand Negroes had fought for their own liberty the Civil War and in the war to make the world safe for democracy. But that

also said that in

64

The Black

didn

Man

impress Mrs. Lee or any of the Negro out of democracy. t

you know

First thing

you’ll

Brings His Gifts

rest

of us and

we concluded

have us eating with Negroes,” said Birdie, and

the chairman said that he d eaten with Republicans and sinners.

meant

to leave the

I

suppose he

Democrats and Socialists but it was a funny way to do it. Somehow I couldn t just figure out that chairman. I kept watching him. Then up pops that editor with a lot of notes and papers. “What about exploration? he asks. Well, we had forgotten that, but naturally the Italians could stage a good stunt with Columbus. to slur

And

the French and Spanish,” said Birdie, “only there are

none of them

in

town, thank God!”

But there are colored

folk!” said that

chairman.

I

just

gave

him

a withering

look.

“Were they Columbus’ cooks?”

I

asked.

Probably, said the chairman, “but the one

Mexico and Arizona. But

I

m

afraid,”

mind discovered New he added slowly, “that we re getting I

have

in

nowhere.”

“We’ve already got there,” said Birdie. But the chairman continued: “How could we when we’re talking for people and not letting them express themselves?”

“But aren’t we the committee?” ,

I

asked.

and by our own appointment.”

“Yes,

“But we represent

all

the races,”

I

insisted, “except, well

— except

the

Negroes.” “Just so,” replied the

work of Negroes,

stressing the

here.

promise

I

chairman, “and while

to say

that

is

I

may seem

you

to

be unduly

simply because they are not represented

nothing further on the matter

few minutes. In the next room,

to

if

you

indulge

will

me

a

woman is waiting. She is that social w'orker at the colored church and she is here by my invitation, had hoped to have her invited to sit on this committee. As that does not seem possible, may a colored

I

she say

He

just a

looked

word?” at

me.

I

looked

at Birdie

and Birdie

stared at Mrs. Cadw'alader

Lee. Mrs. Lee arose.

“Certainly

— oh, certainly,” she said sweetly.

of course, you wall understand that

and out she

I

“Don’t

we Lees must draw

let

me

interfere. But,

the line

somew here,”

w'as just

about

sailed.

knew’ the whole thing w^as dead as a door nail and

when

marched

I

to tell

Negro before we’d had a chance to talk about lier. She had on a tailor-made gow n that cost fifty dollars if a cent, a smart toque and (would you believe it?) she w'as a graduate of the University of Birdie so

in

that

65

Race Concepts and the World of Color

Chicago!

one

If there’s

at that.

anything

didn’t

I

know

hate

I

it’s

how

just

woman. And here was

a eollege

to treat

her so

I

turned

sort of half

shoulder to her and looked out the window. She began with an essay. lot of

to

long words whieh sounded right even

be driving

at

Who made

was

they weren’t.

It

my

had

a

What she seemed

this:

this big

country? Not the millionaires, the ministers and the

“know-alls,” but laborers

and drudges and

business to forget this and pretend that nobility

if

a black

slaves.

And

we were

she said that

all

we had no

descended from the

and gentry and college graduates. She even went so

far as to say that

eranks and prostitutes and plain fools had a hand in making this republic, and

Ameriea was what it proved as to the possibilities of eommon-plaee people and that the hope of the future lay right in these everythat the real glory of

day people. It

was the truth and

dare to

let

on

to

I

knew

eaeh other,

window and she

laid aside

it

and

mueh

so did

all

of us, but, of eourse,

less to her.

So

her essay and began

I

just

to talk.

we

didn’t

kept staring out the

She handed

to the

She named a lot of people I never heard of; and others like Dunbar and Braithwaite and Chesnutt, but had always thought they were white. She reminded us of Bert Williams and told us of some fellows named Aldridge and Gilpin. Negro, music, painting sculpture, drama, daneing, poetry and

letters.

I

And then

she got on our nerves. She said

beautiful things hurt.

That

it

all

this writing

was born of suffering. That sometimes the pain

blurred the message, but that the blood and erying lurked beneath.

she took out a

little

She read about did to black folks

thin black

this

and doing

book and

And at last

read.

eountry not belonging to white folks any more than

it

that the black folks got here before the pilgrims.

I

and

eouldn’t help stepping on Birdie’s toes because she says her people

some boat named

after a

came in on flower so long ago she’s forgot their names. The black

Negro could be found on every page of the story of America. This made me sick and I turned and glared right at her. But she looked right through me and went on. She said Negroes had been soldiers in all our wars, had nursed the babies, eooked the food and sung and danced girl

said that the story of the

besides working so hard that “working like a nigger” was about the hardest

work you could picture.

And

she asked us

She had

me up

a

America could have been Ameriea without Negroes. tree, I must admit. And I reckon the rest felt as I did — all if

exeept that editor.

The chairman looked at us with and read

it

owl-like eyes; then

aloud as he did:

“T/mco Nigros

et

dona

ferentes.'"

66

he shoved a paper

at

me

The Black

Man

Brings His Gifts

Nobody knows what he meant and nobody gave him

the satisfaction of

asking.

we

Well,

didn

t

just sat

touch the

and stared

real question;

until she

and

left.

that was,

Then we went on talking but we could we have America’s Making

without Mrs. Cadwalader Lee and with the Negroes?

We

couldn

t

make up our minds and

we had courage

before

to say so

openly we went smash on religion.

We

might possibly have had some

we hadn

t

discussed religion.

You

sort of

an America’s Making pageant

see, the editor

who

is

if

downright malicious

and hates the Federation of Women’s Clubs because they start things, got us all wrong by trying to get a definition of religion. He was strong on meekness and humility and turning the other cheek and didn’t mean a word of it. “I

that sort of thing

and

all

must admit,” said the preacher, “that American Negro will get a large share.” “I

“But “I

will the

inherit the earth?”

jumped up and reached she

pacifist,”

am

“And slaps

meek

if

the

meek

to

be slaves

inherit the earth, the

asked.

I

think so,” said the chairman calmly.

Birdie

“I

know he

suppose,” said Birdie, “that you’ll be saying that the Negroes have given

our religion because they’re cowards and allowed themselves and take insult today meekly.” us

I

for her cloak. “I believe you’re a

Jew and

a

said.

both,” he answered. I

suppose,” said

I,

getting

my

hat

on

straight, “that

when somebody

you over, you turn the other cheek.”

“I did,” said

he.

“Well, you’re a fool,”

And

Birdie yelled,

cheek? Answer

“They

me

I

answered, reaching for

“And what

did they

do

that?”

crucified me,” said the chairman.

t

67

to

my

you

coat.

after

you turned the other

The Negro College

It

has been said

nothing

many

times that a Negro University

is

nothing more and

than a university. Quite recently one of the great leaders of education in the United States, Abraham Flexner, said something of that sort concerning Howard. As President of the Board of Trustees, he said he was seeking to build not a Negro university, but a University. And by those words less

he brought again before our eyes the ideal of a great institution of learning which becomes a center of universal culture. With all good will toward them that say such words — it is the object of this paper to insist that there can be no college for Negroes which

Negro

university, just like a

universal culture start

on the earth

develop

1933,

first

as

German

or Swiss university

may rightly aspire

to a

unhampered by limitations of race and culture, yet it must where we sit and not in the skies whither we aspire. May I

place,

we have

seemed

not a Negro college and that while an American

thought.

this

In the

is

we have got to remember that here

in

America,

in the year

which cannot be ignored. There was a time when it though we might best attack the Negro problem by ignoring its a situation

most unpleasant

features.

It

was not and

is

not yet

m

good

taste to

speak

generally about certain facts which characterize our situation in America. We are politically hamstrung. We have the greatest difficulty in getting suitable and remunerative work. Our education is more and more not only being

confined

to

our own schools but

to a segregated public school

system

far

below the average of the nation with one-third of our children continuously out of scliool. And above all, and this we like least to mention, we suffer social ostracism which is so deadening and discouraging that we are compelled either to

he about

it

or to turn our faces to the red flag of revolution.

It

consists

of studied and repeated and emphasized public insult of the sort which during all the long history of the world has led men to kill or be killed. And in the full face of any effort which any black man may make to escape this ostracism for From The

Crisis,

August

19'?3.

68

The Negro College

himself, stands this flaming sword of racial doctrine

and energy

effort

We boast and that

which

will distract his

does not lead him to spiritual suicide.

if it

have right

our accomplishment between the days

to boast of

studied here and this forty-fifth anniversary of my graduation.

I

It is

calm

a

appraisal of fact to say that the history of modern civilization cannot surpass it

can parallel the advance of American Negroes

culture in these years.

common

And

courage honestly

when we have

yet,

in every essential line of

we must have we have made forward

said this

admit that every step been greeted by a step backward on the part of the American public intolerance,

mob

law,

and

need but remind you

I

Crow

to

car in Tennessee

if

the

has

in caste

racial hatred.

that

and

I

when graduated from I

no “Jhn brakeman aside

Fisk there was

saw Hunter of ’89 once sweep a

Union Station and escort a crowd of Fisk students into the first-class for which they had paid. There was no legal disfranchisement and a

at the

seats

black Fiskite sat in the Legislature; and while the Chancellor of the Vanderbilt University had annually to be reintroduced to the President of Fisk, yet no

white Southern group presumed to dictate the internal social

life

of this

institution.

Manifestly with

all

that can be said, pro

by way of excuse and hope,

this

is

the situation and

human way by which these facts can be sing a song or write a

and con, and

ignored.

book or carry on

and

in extenuation,

we know

it.

There

is

no

We cannot do our daily work,

a universit}'

and

though these

act as

things were not. If this

is

true,

then no matter

American Negro problem

how much we may

dislike the statement, the

and must be the center of the Negro American university. It has got to be. You are teaching Negroes. There is no use pretending that you are teaching Chinese or that you are teaching white Americans or that you are teaching citizens of the world. You are teaching

American Negroes

is

and they are the subjects of a caste system in the Republic of the United States of America and their life problem is primarily this problem of caste.

Upon Nor

is

Spain

in 1933,

these foundations, therefore, your university must start and build.

the thing so entirely unusual or unheard of as is

not simply a university.

located in Spain.

for

Spaniards

a

in

sounds.

Spanish university.

uses the Spanish language.

It

and makes conditions is

It is

it

It

starts

It

A university in is

a university

with Spanish history

Spain the starting point of its teaching.

Its

education

— not for them as they may be or ought to be, but as they are

with their present problems and disadvantages and opportunities. In other words, the Spanish university just as surely as a

have

difficulty in

French university apprehending

is

this

69

is

founded and grounded

in Spain,

French, lliere are some people very clear truth.

who

They assume,

for

Race Concepts and the World of Color

instance, that the French university

is

in a singular sense universal,

based on a comprehension and inclusion of lems. But

much

it is

not

and the assumption

so,

mankind and of

all

that

arises

it is

is

founded

knowledge of French

France;

in

simply because so

history.

major problems and

The

A

French

and assumes

uses the French language

it

is

their prob-

of French culture has been built into universal civilization,

university

and

a

present problems of the French people are

becomes universal only so far as other peoples of the world comprehend and are at one with France in its mighty and beautiful its

it

history.

same way,

In the

with Negroes.

a

Negro

university in the United States of America begins

uses that variety of the English idiom

which they understand; and above all, it is founded or it should be founded on a knowledge of the history of their people in Africa and in the United States, and their present condition. Without whitewashing or translating wish into fact, it begins with that; and then it asks how shall these young men and women be trained to It

earn a living and live a

under the circumstances in which they find themselves or with such changing of those circumstances as time and work and determination will permit. Is this

statement of the

change from older

life

field

ideals?

I

of a Negro university a denial of aspiration or a

do not think

it is,

although

I

admit

in

my own

mind some change of thought and modification of method. The system of learning which bases itself upon the actual condition of certain classes and

human

groups of

menace.

It

beings

proposes that

tempted

minor premise of fatal the knowledge given and the methods pursued in is

such institutions of learning

shall

be

to suppress a

for the definite object of

perpetuating

present conditions or of leaving their amelioration in the hands of and at the initiative

of us

of other forces and other

who

folk.

This was the great criticism that those

fouglit for higher education of

Negroes

thirty years ago,

brought

against the industrial school.

The

industrial school

American Negroes and

And

founded said:

itself and rightly

“What can be done

answer was: “A training

upon to

the actual situation of

change

this situation?”

technique and method such as would incorporate the disadvantaged group into the industrial organization of the its

country,”

and

in that

in

organization the leaders of the Negro had perfect faith.

Since that day the industrial machine has cracked and groaned.

Its

technique

has changed faster than any school could teach; the relations of capital and labor have increased in complication and it has become so clear that Negro poverty

not primarily caused by ignorance of technical know ledge that the industrial school has almost surrendered its program. is

In opposition to that, the

years said:

What

black

men

opponents of college training in those earlier need is the broader and more universal training

70

The Negro College

can apply the general principle of knowledge circumstances of their condition.” so that they

to the particular

Here again was the indubitable truth but incomplete truth. The technical problem lay in the method of teaching this broader and more universal truth and here just as in the industrial program, we must start where we are and not where we w ish to be. As

I

said a

few years ago

something of truth and

at

How ard

right.

University',

both these positions had thus

Because of the peculiar economic situation

in

our countr\^ the program of the industrial school came to grief first and has practically been given up. Starting even though we may with the actual condition of the Negro peasant and artisan, w^e cannot ameliorate his condition simply by learning a trade w hich is the technique of a passing era. More vision

and know^ledge are needed than

Negro college of a generation ago applying know^ledge to

and

out,

it

facts,

did not carry

it

it

set

But on the other hand, while the down a defensible and true program of that.

unfortunately could not completely carry

out,

it

because the one thing that the industrial

philosophy gave to education, the Negro college did not take and that w^as that the university education of black men in the United States must be grounded in the

On

condition and work of those black men! the other hand,

it

would be of course

industrial philosophy almost said, that so far as

education must stop w ith

this.

No,

idiotic to say, as the

most black

men

former

concerned

are

starting wath present conditions

and using

the facts and the knowledge of the present situation of American Negroes, the

Negro

university expands tow^ard the possession

knowledge.

and

It

and the conquest of

seeks from a beginning of the history of the

in Africa to interpret all history;

from

a

Negro

in

America

beginning of social development

among Negro slaves and freedmen in America and Negro tribes and doms in Africa, to interpret and understand the social development mankind

all

king-

of

all

the surroundings and habits

modern science of matter and life from and aptitudes of American Negroes and thus lead

up

and matter

to

in all ages.

It

seeks to reach

understanding of

And

this

is

life

a different

program than

in the universe.

a similar function w^ould

be

in a wdiite

university or in a Russian university or in an English university, because starts

from

a different point.

It is

a matter of beginnings

it

and integrations of one

group which sweep instinctive knowledge and inheritance and current reactions into a universal world of science, sociology, and art. In no other w^ay can

American Negro college function. It cannot begin with history and lead to Negro history. It cannot start wath sociology and lead to Negro sociology^. Why was it that the Renaissance of literature w hich began among Negroes ten years ago has never taken real and lasting root? It was because it was a transplanted and exotic thing. It was a literature written for the benefit of the

71

Race Concepts and the World of Color

white people and

behest of white readers, and starting out privately from

at the

the white point of view.

never had a real Negro constituency and

It

it

did not

grow out of the inmost heart and frank experience of Negroes; on such an artificial basis no real literature can grow.

On

the other hand,

starting in a great

if

Negro

university

you have knowl-

edge, beginning with the particular, and going out to universal comprehen-

and unhampered expression, you are going to begin to realize for the American Negro the full life which is denied him now. And then after that comes a realization of the older object of our college — to bring this universal sion

culture

down and apply

it

to the individual life

and individual conditions of

living Negroes.

The

must become not simply a center of knowledge but a center of applied knowledge and guide of action. And this is all the more necessary

now

university

since

we

easily see that

planned action especially

in

economic

life, is

going to be the watchword of civilization. If its

the college does not thus root

knowledge and culture

college in this function. to

itself in

A strong,

into

intelligent family life

This has happened and

life.

privileged people. But

it

and afterward apply organs must replace the

life

to actual living, other social

higher culture; and, too, a social clan

him

the group

may is

may adjust the student

receive the graduate

happening among

costs society a fatal price.

It

and induct

a minorify of

tends to hinder progress

and hamper change;

it

universal before

German, French, Negro. Grounded

makes education propaganda for things as they are. It leaves the mass of those without family training and without social standing misfits and rebels who despite their education are uneducated in its meaning and application. The only college which stands for the progress of all, mass as well as aristocracy, functions in root and blossom as well as in the overshadowing and heaven-filling tree. No system of learning — no university can be and condition, haply

it

We

may

it is

find

it

— and

finding

it,

bring

it

it

seek the universal and earth

and

us.

have imbibed from the surrounding white world a childish idea of

progress. Progress

there

may down to

in Poland, Italy, or elsewhere,

in inexorable fact

no such

means bigger and

better results always

and

forever.

But

thousand years of human culture, the losses and retrogressions have been enormous. We have no assurance this twentieth is

rule of life. In six

century civilization will survive.

We

do not know that American Negroes will survive. There are sinister signs about us, antecedent to and unconnected with the Great Depression. The organized might of industry North and South is relegating the

Negro

to the

edge of survival and using him

as a labor reservoir

on starvation wage. No secure professional class, no science, literature, nor art can live on such a subsoil. It is an insistent, deep-throated cry for rescue, guidance, and organized advance that greets the black leader today, and the

72

The Negro College

him has got to let him know at least as much about the great black miners strike in Alabama as about the age of Pericles. We are on the threshold of a new era. Let us not deceive ourselves with college that trains

outw'orn ideals of wealth and servants and luxuries, reared on a foundation of ignorance, starvation, and want. Instinctively, we have absorbed these ideals

from our twisted white American environment. This new economic planning is not for us unless we do it. Unless the American Negro today, led by trained university

men

of broad vision,

down

sits

mathematics, by physics and chemistry',

and where he

is

and

to establish a

is

— unless this

is

interior caste in the

Here, then,

is

United States

a job for the

reasonable Life in

done, the university has missed

and function and the American Negro

field

its

and how he

to earn a living

the United States or elsewhere

work out by economics and by history and sociology, exactly how to

is

doomed

to

be

a suppressed

for incalculable time.

American Negro

university.

It

cannot be

dodged without the growing menace of disaster. the problem before you as one which you must not ignore. successfully ignored or

To

lay

I

and only two things are necessary — Buildings and endowments may help, but they are not

carry out this plan, two things

teachers and students. indispensable.

It

is

necessary

first

have teachers

to

who comprehend

this

program and know how to make it live among their students. This is calling for a good deal, because it asks that teachers teach that which they have learned in

no American school and which they never

am

will learn until

No

we have

a

Negro

who comes to a university like Fisk, filled simply with general ideas of human culture or general knowledge of disembodied science, is going to make a university of this school. Because a university is made of human beings, learning of the things they do not know from the things they do know in their own lives. And secondly, we must have students. They must be chosen for their ability university of the sort that

to learn.

There

is

privileged classes

take education.

I

envisioning.

teacher, black or white,

always the temptation to assume that the children of the

— the

One

rich, the noble, the

white

— are

has but to express this to realize

perhaps the most dangerous thing imitate the white world

among

and assume

that

us

is

for us,

who can

best

utter futility.

But

those its

without thought,

we can choose

students at Fisk

because of the amount of money which their parents have happened hold

We

of.

is

to get

going to give us an extraordinary aggregation.

want, by the nicest methods possible, to seek out the talented and the

gifted

and

That basis of selection

to

to

among our fill

constituency, quite regardless of their wealth or position,

this university

and similar

institutions with persons

who have

got

enough to take fullest advantage of what the university offers. There is no other way. With teachers who know what they are teaching and whom they brains

73

Race Concepts and the World of Color

and the

are teaching,

life

that surrounds both the

knowledge and the knower,

and with students who have the capacity and the will to absorb this knowledge, we can build the sort of Negro university which will emancipate not simply the black folk of the United States, but those white folk suppress Negroes have killed their

effort to

Men

own

who

in their

culture.

in their desperate effort to replace equality with caste

and

to build

inordinate wealth on a foundation of abject poverty have succeeded in killing

democracy,

art,

and

religion.

Only a universal system of learning rooted in the will and condition of the masses and blossoming from that manure up toward the stars is worth the name. Once built it can only grow as it brings down sunlight and starshine and impregnates the mud.

The

chief obstacle in this rich land

and with the

abilities

endowed with everv

of a hundred different peoples

national resource

— the

chief and only

coming of that kingdom of economic equality which is the only logical end of work, is the determination of the white world to keep the black world poor and make themselves rich. The disaster which this selfish and shortsighted policy has brought lies at the bottom of this present depression, and too, its cure lies beside it. Your clear vision of a world without wealth, obstacle to the

of capital without profit, of income based on work alone, only for you but for all men.

is

the path out not

program of segregation, emphasis of race, and particularism as against national unity and universal humanity? It is and it is not by choice but by force; you do not get humanity by wishing it nor do you become American Is

not

this a

citizens simply

because you want

A Negro university, from

to.

of unfaltering facing of the truth, from

not advocate segregation by race;

hammered

segregated, apart, legal sanction

strength

and

backed by

its

unblinking stare

high ground

hard

facts

simply accepts the bald fact that

it

into a separate unity

mob

at

its

law,

and that

does

we

are

by spiritual intolerance and

this separation

is

growing

in

worse today than a half century ago and that no character, address, culture, or desert is going to change it in our day or for fixation; that

it is

centuries to come. Recognizing this brute

are

idiotic to

we

gathering in great institutions of learning proceed to ask. going to do about it? It is silly to ignore the gloss of truth; it is

proceed

Here we stand.

as

though we were white or yellow, English or Russian.

We are American Negroes.

we form

a real race. Biologically

but race

is

we

It is

beside the point to ask whether

are mingled of all conceivable elements,

psychology, not biology; and psychologically

with one history, one red

whether we segregated;

groups of cultured, trained

men

and devoted

What

fact,

will

we

memory, and one

revolt.

be segregated or whether we ought

are a caste. This

is

our given and

74

It

we is

to

are a unified race

not ours

be a

caste.

to

argue

We

are

at present unalterable fact.

The Negro College

Our problem

is

how far and

in

what way can we consciously and

scientifically

guide our future so as to ensure our physical survival, our spiritual freedom and our social growth? Either we do this or we die. There is no alternative. If

America proposed the murder of this group, and crime and its utter loss of manhood, sooner

“If

we

realize this the better.

we must

die, let

it

It is

self-assertion,

that great line of

and courage, the

McKay:

not be like hogs.”

But the alternative of not dying snarling dogs.

By

moral descent into imbecility

its

hogs

like

is

not that of dying or killing like

rather conquering the world by thought

by expression and organized cultural

ideals.

Therefore

and brain and plan;

let

us not beat futile

wings in impotent frenzy, but carefully plan and guide our segregated life, organize in industry and politics to protect it and expand it and above all to give

it

unhampered

spiritual expression in art

and

of fear and cowardice to say this cannot be done.

literature.

It is

the counsel

What must be can be and

it is

only a question of science and sacrifice to bring the great consummation.

What

that will be,

no one knows.

the world along the color line; spiritual

and group

tion of class

integrity

it

may be

barriers in

ated by talent, susceptibility and

a great physical segregation of

may be an economic

amid physical

and race and color

long centuries and not years.

It

gift

We live

diversity. It

rebirth

which ensures

may be

utter annihila-

one ultimate mankind,

— but any

differenti-

of these ends are matters of

in years, swift-flying, transient years.

hold the possible future in our hands but not by wish and thought, plan, knowledge, and organization.

If

will,

We

only by

the college can pour into the

coming age an American Negro who knows himself and his plight and how to protect himself and fight race prejudice, then the world of our dream will

come and

not otherwise.

75

On

Being Ashamed of Oneself An Essay on Race

My grandfather left a passage

Pride

in his diary expressing his indignation at receiv-

ing an invitation to a “Negro” picnic. Alexander

Du

born

Bois,

in the

Bahamas, son of Dr. James Du Bois of the well-known Du Bois family of Poughkeepsie, N.Y., had been trained as a gentleman in the Cheshire School of Connecticut, and the implications of a Negro picnic were anathema to his fastidious soul.

meant

It

close association with poverty, ignorance

and sup-

pressed and disadvantaged people, dirty and with bad manners.

This was

in 1856.

Seventy years

Marcus Carvey discovered that a black skin was in itself a sort of patent to nobility, and that Negroes ought to be proud of themselves and their ancestors, for the same or analogous reasons

made white

that

later.

folk feel superior.

Thus, within the space of three-fourths of

swung

betvv^een race pride

and race

suicide,

a century, the

pendulum has

between attempts

up a between

to build

and attempts to escape from ourselves. In the years emancipation and 1900, the theory of escape was dominant. We were, by birth, law and training, American citizens. We were going to escape into the racial ethos

mass of Americans

in the

same way that the

the Italians were beginning to

and Scandinavians and even disappear. The process was going to be slower Irish

on account of the badge of color; but then,

after all,

it

was not so

much

the

matter of physical assimilation as of spiritual and psychic amalgamation with the American people. for

must

this reason,

salute the

we must oppose

American

devotion and fervor,

all

segregation and

Crisis,

we

and sing “Our Country Tis of Thee” with and we must fight for our rights with a long and carefully for this

purpose with

colored and white.

'I'he

patriotism;

flag

planned campaign; uniting

From

all racial

September 1933.

76

all

sympathetic people,

On

This

is still

the

Being Ashamed of Oneself

dominant philosophy of most American Negroes and

back of the objection

even using a special designation “Afro-American” or any such term. to

like

it is

“Negro” or even

But there are certain practical difficulties connected with this program which are becoming more and more clear today. First of all comes the fact

we

ashamed of ourselves and are thus estopped from valid objection when white folks are ashamed to call us human. The reasons of that

are

still

course, are not as emphatic as they were in the case of

remember

a colored

man, now

ex-patriate,

who made

my

grandfather.

this discovery in

1

my

company, some twenty-five years ago. He was a handsome burning brown, tall, straight and well-educated, and he occupied a position which he had won, across and in spite of the color line. He did not believe in Negroes, for himself or his family, and he planned elaborately to escape the trammels of

he had responded

race. Yet,

touched training;

meeting of colored

folk

which

and he came. He found men of his own caliber and he found men charming and companionable. He was thoroughly

his interests,

delighted.

I

know

that never before, or

such congenial company.

and

to a call for a

reiterating

He

I

doubt

if

ever since, he had been in

could not help mentioning his joy continually

it.

All colored folk

had gone through the same experience,

largely in the last hv^enty-five years, colored

for

more and more,

America has discovered

discovered groups of people, association with despite their ideal of American assimilation, in

whom

is

itself;

a poignant joy

more and more

cases

has

and

and with

more and more determined object they seek each other. That involves, however, a drawing of class lines inside the Negro race, and it means the emergence of a certain social aristocracy, who by reasons of looks and means the emergence of a certain social aristocracy, who by reasons of and income, education and contact, form the sort of upper social group which the world has long known and helped to manufacture and preserve. looks

The

Negro group was simply color and a bald imitation of the white environment. Later, it tended, more and more, to be based on wealth and still more recently on education and social position. This leaves a mass of untrained and uncultured colored folk and even of early basis of this

and groups of impoverished workers of of colored Americans are ashamed. d1iey are ashamed

trained but ill-mannered people

w hom

this

upper

class

both directly and indirectly,

just as

any richer or better sustained group

in a

ashamed of those less fortunate and withdraws its skirts from touching them. But more than that, because the upper colored group is desperately afraid of being represented before American whites by this lower group, or nation

is

being mistaken for them, or being treated as though they were part of are

pushed

to the

it,

they

extreme of effort to avoid contact with the poorest classes of

77

Race Concepts and the World of Color

Negroes. This exaggerates, at onee, the secret shame of being identified with such people and the anomaly of insisting that the physical characteristics of these folk

which the upper

class shares, are not the stigmata of degradation.

When, therefore, in offense or defense, the leading group of Negroes must make common cause with the masses of their own race, the embarrassment or hesitation becomes apparent. They are embarrassed and indignant because

man

an educated

should be treated as a Negro, and that no Negroes receive

credit for social standing.

They

ashamed and embarrassed because of the compulsion of being classed with a mass of people over whom they have no real control and whose action they can influence only with difficulty and compromise and with every risk of defeat. Especially

is all

are

natural control over this group difficult



I

mean

control of

law and police, of economic power, of guiding standards and ideals, of news propaganda. On this comes even greater difficulty because of the incompatibility of any action

which looks toward

racial integrity

and race action with

What are we really aiming at? The building of a new nation or the integration of a new group into an old nation? The latter has long been our ideal. Must it be changed? Should it be changed? If we seek new' group loyalty, new pride of race, new racial integrity — how, where and by what method shall these things be attained? A new plan must be built up. It cannot previous ideals.

be the mere rhodomontade and fatuous propaganda on which Garveyism was based. It has got to be far-sighted planning. It will involve increased segregation

and perhaps migration.

It

aged by every “nigger-hater”

This

is,

be pounced upon and aided and encour-

in the land.

comment on all this, it may be pointed out that this is day for the experiment of new nations or the emphasis of racial lines. or at least we thought it w^as, the day of the Inter-nation, of Humanity',

Moreover, not the

will

in further

and the disappearance of “race” from our vocabulary. Are we American Negroes seeking to move against, or into the face of this fine philosophy? Here then

is

citizens

the real problem, the real

and

racial pride,

which

new dilemma between

faces

American American Negroes today and which is rights of

not ahvays or often clearly faced. 1 he situation

and

is

this:

America,

social recognition to

Negro was

in

denying equality of rights, of employment

American Negroes, has

said in the past that the

below the average nation in social position, that he could not be recognized until he had developed further. In the answ'er to this, the Negro so far

has eliminated five-sixths of his illiteracy according to official figures, and greatly increased the number of colored persons w'ho have received education

of the higher

sort.

They

still

are poor with a large

number

of delinquents and

dependents. Nevertheless, their average situation in this respect has been greatly improved and, on the other hand, the emergence and accomplish-

78

On

Being Ashamed

of

Oneself

ment of colored men of abilit\^ have been undoubted. Notw ithstanding this, the Negro is still a group apart, with almost no social recognition, subject to and discrimination, w ith income and w'age far below' the average of the nation and the most deliberately exploited industrial class in America. Even insult

trained Negroes have increasing difficulty in sustain a civilized standard of

life.

changes, color discrimination as

Negro

ingly difficult for the

machine

The

it

making

a living sufficient to

economic

Particularly in the recent vast

now

goes on,

going

is

make

to

increas-

it

remain an integral part of the industrial

to

or to increase his participation in accordance with his ability.

integration of industry

is

making

it

more and more

possible for

executives to exercise their judgment in ehoosing for key positions persons

w ho can guide the

industrial

machine, and the exclusion of persons from

such positions merely on the basis of race and color or even Negro descent widely recognized and easily defended prerogative. All that

is

The

descent.”

For

and excuse

answ'er

this reason, the

to

Negro

s

an

eligible candidate

are final

and

less, is

certainly

much

is

of

Negro

opportunity in State directed industry and his if

not actually grow-

smaller than his growth in education and

Either the industry of the nation in the future trusts or

“He

to say in

but universally accepted.

all

opportunity in the great private organization of industry ing

is:

a

necessary for

any Christian American gentleman of high position and wide power denying place and promotion

is

by government control. There seems

is

to

be conducted by private

both to be

in

ability.

little

or

no chance

of advancement for the Negro worker, the edueated artisan and the educated leader.

On the other hand, organized labor than ever.

It

has practically excluded

is

giving Negroes less recognition today

them from

all

the higher lines of skilled

work, on railroads, in machine-shops, in manufaeture and in the basic indus-

wTere the Negro has

theoretically the largest opportunity,

tries.

In agriculture,

he

excluded from successful participation, not only by conditions

is

to all farmers,

but by special conditions due

common

to lynching, lawlessness, dis-

franchisement and social degradation. Facing these indisputable

opinion ganda.

in

America no

Our advance

facts,

there

on the part of the leaders of public

effective response to

in the last quarter

integrated institutions

is

and

efforts

our agitation or organized propa-

eentury has been

and not

in effective

in segregated, raeially

entrance into American

Negro churches, Negro schools, Negro colleges, Negro business and Negro art and literature our advance has been determined and inspiring; but in industry, general professional careers and national life, we have fought battle after battle and lost more often than w'e have won. There national

life.

In

seems no hope that America substantial

in

our day w ill yield

in

its

color or race hatred any

ground and we have no physical nor economic power, nor any

79

Race Concepts and the World of Color

alliance with other social or

decent civilized ideals in

The next

step, then,

is

economic classes that will force compliance with Church, State, industry or art.

certainly one

group action.

It

Negro descent

for their preservation

Indies

on the part of the Negro and

and

involves the organization of intelligent

and advancement

in

it

involves

earnest people of

America, in the West

and in Africa; and no sentimental distaste for racial or national unity can

be allowed

A new

hold them back from a step which sheer necessity demands. organized group action along economic lines, guided by intelto

ligence and with the express object of making better living and, therefore,

more

it

possible for Negroes to earn a

effectively to support agencies for social

without the slightest doubt the next step. It will involve no opposition from white America because they do not believe we can accomplish it. They expect always to be able to crush, insult, ignore and exploit 12,000,000 uplift,

is

individual Negroes without intelligent organized opposition. This organization is going to involve deliberate propaganda for race pride. That is, it is going

out by convincing American Negroes that there is no reason for their being ashamed of themselves; that their record is one which should make them proud; that their history in Africa and the world is a history of effort, to start

success and

comparable with that of any other people. Such measured statements can, and will be exaggerated. There will be those who will want to say that the black race is the first and greatest of races, trial,

that

its

accomplishments are most extraordinary,

and

its

mistakes negligible. This

the superiority

is

that

the kind of talk

its

desert

statements

among

restraining

it.

We

it,

since

other races; but

it is

can refuse deliberately

same time taking

just as true,

we can

races.

and

just as false as

is

to lie

about our

just pride in Nefertari,. Askia,

no other way;

let

us not be deceived.

beaten into submission and degradation find

some place

voluntarily given

them

such

use intelligence in modifying and history,

if

while

at the

Moshesh, Toussaint and

Frederick Douglass, and testing and encouraging belief in our organized economic and social action.

There

most obvious

we hear from people with

complex among the white and the yellow

We cannot entirely escape

is

own

ability

American Negroes

will

by be

they merely wait unorganized to

in the

new

reconstruction of the

economic world. They must themselves force their race into the new economic set-up and bring with them the millions of West Indians and Africans by peaceful organization for normative action or else drift into greater poverty, greater crime, greater helplessness until there is no resort but the last red alternative of revolt, revenge

and war.

80

The Present Plight the German Jew

of

There has been no tragedy in modern times equal in its awful effeets to the fight on the Jew in Germany. It is an attaek on eivilization, eomparable only to sueh horrors as the Spanish Inquisition and the Afriean slave trade. It has set eivilization baek a hundred years, and in partieular has it made the settlement and understanding of raee problems more difficult and more doubtful. It is

and

is

many

already passing. Visitors to the

Germany was episodic, Olympic Games are apt to have gotten

They saw no Jewish

oppression. Just as Northern visitors to

widely believed by

that impression.

that the Jewish

no Negro oppression. This conclusion is largely based on

problem

in

Mississippi see

of the

German

They

people.

a

is

is

true.

I

essential character

are a kindly folk, good-hearted, hating oppres-

sion, widely sympathetic with suffering,

mankind. This

knowledge of the

know no folk

in

and

filled

with longing ideals for

Europe of whom

this characterization

But one must not forget that the active German

truer.

folk today

An

ible,

in

prominence,

and must comfort

is

all

And

and today unquestionable policy of Germany.

integral part of that policy, just as

growing

the

is

National Socialist Party, under Adolf Hitler, his coadjutors and backers. that they set the unquestioned

all

prominent now

as earlier

and perhaps

The proof of this is incontrovertof the world who depend on race

world war on Jews. those in any part

men. Adolf Hitler hardly ever makes a speech today — and his speeches reach every corner of Germany, by radio, newspaper, placard, movie and public announcement — without belittling, blaming or cursing Jews. From my winhate as the salvation of

dow

as

I

write

I

see a great red poster, seven feet high, asking the

people to contribute to winter relief of the poor, so that

German

Germany will

not sink

to the level of the “J^wish-Bolshevist countries of the rest of the world.”

From

the Pittsburgh Courier,

December

19, 19^6.

81

At

Race Concepts and the World of Color

Nuremberg

recently he accused the

foreign Jewish element” as causing the

Aryan world. His propaganda minister was more insulting, and said that the whole oppression of Germany by the world was caused by Jew ish rotting of the

emigrants. Every misfortune of the world

Jews

-the Spanish

is

in

whole or

in part

rebellion, the obstruction to world trade, etc.

blamed on

One

finds

cases in the papers: Jews jailed for sex relations with

German women; a peace witnessed it; Ma-

marriage disallow'ed because a Jewish justice of the sons excluded from office in the National Socialist Party, because Jews are Masons; advertisements excluding Jews; the total disfranchisement of all Jews; deprivation of civil rights and inability to remain or become limited rights of education, and narrowly limited right

German

to

professions and the

mob

civil service;

violence, for any

work

citizens;

in trades,

the threat of boycott, loss of work and even

German who

trades with a Jew; and,

above

all,

the

continued circulation of Julius Streicher s Stuenner, the most shameless, lying advocate of race hate in the world, not excluding Florida. It could not sell a copy without Hitler s consent.

82

Japanese Colonialism

I

brush aside as immaterial the question as

independent

state or a

to

whether Manchoukuo

is

an

The main question for me is: What is Manchuria and how is she doing it? Is she

colony of Japan.

Japan doing for the people of

building up a caste of Superiors and Inferiors? the people to slavery and poverty?

Is

Is

she reducing the mass of

she stealing the land and monopolizing

Manchuria happier or more miserpower on their soil? I have been in

the natural resources? Are the people of

able for the presence of this foreign

Manchuria only a week. But in that time I have seen its borders north, west and south; its capital and their chief cities and many towns; I have walked the streets night and day; I have talked with officials, visited industries and read reports.

Africa

I

came prepared

and the West

compare this colonial situation with colonies in under white European control. I have come to the

to

Indies,

firm conclusion that in no colony that

I

have seen or read of is there such clear

evidence of

(1)

Absence of racial or color

(2)

Impartial law and order;

(3)

Public control of private capital for the general welfare;

(4)

Services for health, education, city-planning, housing, consumers’

caste;

co-operation and other social ends; (5)

The incorporation of the natives ment and social readjustment.

There

is

undoubtedly

much

still

to

into the administration of govern-

be done

in all these lines, but the

amount already accomplished in four years is nothing less than marvelous. The people appear happy, and there is no unemployment. There is public peace and order. A lynching in Manchoukuo would be unthinkable. There are public services to improve crops, market them and increase their From

the Pittsburgh Courier, February' 13, 1937.

83

Race Concepts and the World of Color

Manchoiikuans are

prices. vices.

I

in the police force

could see nothing that savored of

and the schools and public

ser-

they separate schools for

caste:

Manchoiikuans and Japanese. But this is based largely, if not wholly, on the fact that one people speak Chinese, and there is no separation in the higher

The Japanese hold no absolute monopoly of the offices of the state. The new housing and new cities take account of the Chinese as well as the schools.

Japanese. There has been private investment of capital on a considerable scale;

but the railroads are partially owned by the

telegraph and telephone are public services. in the world

is

The

state; electricity, water, gas,

largest

open cut coal mine

Manchuria: these mines send out 23,000 thousand tons of

in

semibituminous coal

in a day; they

manufacture coke and sulphuric acid and

24,000 tons of gasoline; they employ 30,000 miners; they have schools,

library,

Manchuria is made here — a total of 1 30,000 kilowatts. Yet all this is not only half owned by the government, but the private employer is under strict government control and regulation. This does not mean that the government of Manchoukuo is hospital, water,

sewage and parks. Electricity

for a large part of

controlling capital for the benefit of the workers. But neither, so far as that

concerned,

is

Japan. There

motherland and colony knowledge,

is

this true.

is,

is

however, no apparent discrimination between

in this respect.

Nowhere

And why? Because

so nearly related in race that there

is

else in the world, to

my

Japanese and Manchoiikuans are

nor can be no race prejudice. Ergo: no

nation should rule a colony whose people they cannot conceive as Equals.

Tomorrow

I

leave

Manchoukuo after a stay marked by courtesy, sympathy and

Today for four hours I have sat in conference with citizens, explaining by means of an interpreter the intricacies of the Negro problem. I hospitality.

was driven

to Port

Arthur and entertained

at

lunch and

later invited to dinner.

Graduates of several American universities were present. Tonight the Ameri-

can consul called.

84

Shanghai

Shanghai

is

an epitome of the

paradox of modern

life.

with the larger part of nations; with

Europe

less

it

is

economic

struggle, the

human

the greatest city of the largest nation on earth,

owned, governed and policed by foreign white

largely controlling

and manufactures; with paid

Here

racial strife,

its

capital,

a vast welter of the hardest

commerce, mines,

working

class in the

than an average of 25 cents a day; with a glittering modern

skyscrapers, beautiful hotels, theaters

and night

world of

life

clubs. In this city of nations

are 19,000 Japanese, 11,000 British, 10,000 Russians, 4,000

Americans and

10,000 other foreigners, living in the midst of 3,000,000 Chinese. divided openly by nations; foreign troops parade

rivers

its

streets;

The

city

foreign warships

is

sit

may and may not do. And yet matters are not as bad as they once were: foreigners now acknowledge that Chinese have some rights in China. It is not common now to kick a coolie or calmly in her gates; foreigners

tell this city

throw a rickshaw’s fare on the ground. But

what

I

saw

it

last

night a

little

white boy of

perhaps four years order three Chinese out of his imperial way on the sidewalk of the Bund, and they meekly obeyed:

it

looked quite like Mississippi. And,

met a “missionary” from Mississippi teaching Shanghai — I mean, a white one!

too,

I

From

the Pittsburgh Courier, February 27, 1937.

in the Baptist University of

Japan, Color,

and Afro-Americans

Every American Negro has been unhappy over the war with Japan because it is a war between nations of different colors, between Europe and Asia, And because we cannot help but believe that the fundamental impulse back of this war was, on the one hand, the century-old determination of Europe to

dominate the yellow peoples

for the benefit of the white;

hand, the resentment of Asiatics

at

and on the other

being considered and treated as inferior to

Europeans. This we see

as the basic pattern;

would not by any means excuse our minds the unwise and ill-considered attack upon the United States Pearl Harbor. That very act gave us pause. Many Negroes, many times, and but

it

in at

in

many places, have looked on revolt and war as the necessary and sole solution of race friction. The experience of Japan has proven hvo things: that domination of one people by other

domination within

So

a race

and

bad

no whit

better than

by elements whose aims and ideals are

anti-social.

selfish races,

as

it is, is

Japan was fighting against color caste, and striving against the domination of Asia by Europeans, she was absolutely right. But so far as she tried to substitute for European, an Asiatic caste system under a “superior” far as

Japanese race; and for the domination and exploitation of the peasants of Asia by Japanese trusts and industrialists, she was offering Asia no acceptable

exchange

for

Western exploitation.

Uneasy, therefore, as

we have been about war between

and Japan, and about our having

as colored

possibly only for the benefit of white people, sustain us: Asia.

From

I

we

are facing the beginning of the

the United States

people to fight colored people

we have

this to

remember and

end of European domination

in

he ideas which Japan started and did not carry through, are not dead.

the Chicago Defender, August 25, 1945.

86

and Afro-Americans

Japan, Color,

but growing.

The

utter

American technique yellow:

it

is

smashing of the

terrible

Japanese machine by the

not an exhibition of race superiority of white over the overthrow of an economy and social tyranny which had is

gripped a fine and progressive people by the throat, and which deserved to be overthrown.

Now comes

the question, after the overthrow of the dominant powers in

we

Japan, what have

discouraged.

is

place? Here again

we

are puzzled

and

outrageous to have at the head of our fighting forces a

man

Halsey whose

like

He

It is

to offer in

its

contempt of colored people can hardly be restrained. system — he is fighting and hating a colored race. How far

bitter

not fighting a

does he represent America?

America which can find itself in this struggle and demand for an emancipated Japanese people, freedom and equality, self-government and development, without slavery and without the contempt of white folk? Is

there an

The recent declaration by the Allies of the terms offered Japan are reassuring. They are complete disarmament; the deprivation of recent conquests; the installation of democratic

methods

in Japan’s

government; destruction of her

war-making industry, but access to outside raw materials. Until a new order of peace and justice is established the Allies will occupy designated points in Japanese

This

territory.

last

requirement

is

unfortunate and perhaps unnecessary.

Whenever

white troops are put in control in a colored country the results are notorious. is

to

be hoped that

this part

It

of the Allied program will be sternly limited in

space and time.

87

Negroes Have an Old Culture

An organization, called Men Of Good Will,

in

New York City has published a

pamphlet on the problem of racial minorities, written by Alice A. Baily. It has a curious and interesting reference to the Negro: “This problem is totally different to that of the Jews. In the

who for

people

case you have an exceedingly ancient

first

thousands of years have played their part in the arena of world

history.

“In the case of the Negro, rise in

are considering a people

the scale of human endeavor.

the European and

modern

This

is

Two hundred

American regarded

tribes, living in a state

the

we

years ago, they were

to

what

as ‘raw savages,' divided into countless

of nature, primitive, warlike, totally uneducated from

point of view.”

ethnologically and historically

can Negroes

who have begun

false.

The

civilization of black Afri-

even more ancient than that of Asiatic Jews. It is untrue that two hundred years ago Africans were raw savages “in a state of nature, totally is

uneducated” and engaged

in internecine wars.

Leo Africanus who visited Negro Africa, south of Sahara and north of the Gulf of Guinea in the 1 5th century, describes Timbuctoo as follows: “The rich king of

Tombuto hath many

and sceptres of gold, somewhere of magnificent and well-furnished court.

plates

weigh 1300 pounds; and he keeps a Here are great store of doctors, judges,

priests,

and other learned men, that are

bountifully maintained at the king's cost and charges'. divers manuscripts or written books out of Berbarie,

money than any other merchandize .” The Mellestine further to the west reached .

And

hither are brought

which are sold

for

more

.

its

greatest

power between

1

307

and 1332. “The Negroes possess some admirable qualities. They are seldom unjust, and have a greater abhorrence of injustice than any other people. Their sultan shows no mercy

There From

is

complete security

the People’s Voice,

to

anyone who

in their country.

November

1,

1947.

88

is

guilty of the least act of

it.

Neither traveler nor inhabitant in

Negroes Have an Old Culture

it

has anything to fear, from robbers or

confiscate the property of any white

be uncounted wealth. trustworthy person

of

On

among

men of violence. They do man who dies in their country, even

the contrary, they give

it

into the charge of

not if it

some

the whites, until the rightful heir takes possession

it.”

Wliat was

it

then that happened “two hundred years ago”?

It

was the

filth

and cruelty of Europe led by England which descended upon Africa and inaugurated for a century the African slave trade which tore the people of Africa from their country to become the foundation of the work and develop-

ment of America.

It is

to

be hoped that the persons

who

are publishing this

extraordinary misinterpretation of the civilization of Africa will try to base their future publications

upon the

truth

89

and not upon

fairy tales.

Gandhi and the American Negroes

Mohandas Gandhi was born nineteen months in a small

town

in the northeastern part of the

Asia and the schools taught

less.

after

my birth. As

United

The one tenuous

school-boy

knew little which bound me

States,

link

a

I

of to

India was skin color.

That was important in America and even in my town, although little was said about it. But I was conscious of being the only brown face in my school and although my dark family had lived in this valley for two hundred years or more, I was early cognizant of a status different from that of

my white As

and

I

schoolmates.

grew up there seemed

at

I

be no future

for

me

in the place of

my birth,

went South, where formerly colored people had been could be trained to work among them. There at Fisk University

seventeen

slaves, so that

to

I

became aware of a world of colored folk and I learned not only of the condition of American Negroes but began to read of China and India; and to make Africa the special object of my study. I published my first book in 1896 while Gandhi was in South Africa, and my subject was the African slave trade. I

first

We

did not at the time have

newspapers, but

I

much

did have several

news from Africa in the American black students from South Africa and began direct

to sense the tragedy of that awful land.

War

that

came

to realize

It

Gandhi’s work

was not until

after the First

World

and the world. I was torn by the problem of peace. As a youth I was certain that freedom for the colored peoples of the earth would come only by war; by doing to white Europe and America what they had done to black Africa and colored Asia. This seemed the natural conclusion from the fairy tales called history on which I had been nourished. Then in the last decades of the 19th century, as I

came

to

I

manhood,

I

for Africa

caught the vision of world peace and signed the pledge

never to take part in war. From Gandhi Marg (Bombay),

1

(July 1957); 1-4.

90

Gandhi and

the

American Negroes

World War came my first knowledge of Gandhi. came to know Lajpat Rai and Madame Naidu. John Haynes Holmes was one of my co-

With the

First

1

workers in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People,

and he was

and admirer of Gandhi. Indeed the “Colored People” referred to in our name was not originally confined to America. I remember the discussion we had on inviting Gandhi to visit America and how we were a friend

forced to conclude that this land was not civilized

man

as

In

enough

to receive a colored

an honored guest.

1929, as the Depression loomed,

American Negroes, which

I

I

asked Gandhi for a message to

published in the

Crisis.

He

said:

Let not the 12 million Negroes be ashamed of the fact that they are the

grandchildren of slaves. There

is

dishonor in being slave-owners. But

not think of honor or dishonor in connection with the that the future

the old wise

is

with those

men

have

who would be

said:

Truth ever

is,

past.

let

us

Let us realize

pure, truthful and loving. For as

untruth never was. Love alone

binds and truth and love accrue only to the truly humble.

May Day,

Through what phantasmagoria of hurt and evil the world has passed since then! We American Negroes have reeled and staggered from side to side and forward and back. In the First World War, we joined with American capital to keep Germany and Italy from sharing the spoils of colonial imperialism. In the Depression we sank beneath the burden of poverty, ignorance and disease due to discrimination, unemployment and crime. In the Second World War, we again joined Western capital against Fascism and failed to realize how the Soviet Union sacrificed her blood and This was written on

1929.

savings to save the world.

But we did realize how out of war began from the control of Europe and America.

Gandhi and States.

to evaluate his

work

As an integral part of

as a

to arise a

We

new

began too

colored world free

to realize the role of

guide for the black people of the United

this country, as workers,

consumers and co-

we could not look forward to physical separation except masters. But what of Gandhi s program of peace and non-

creators of its culture, as a

change of

violence? Only in the possibility of this

American Negroes begun to see the program being applied to the Negro problems in the United last

year have

States.

Personally

I

was long puzzled. After the World Depression,

recurring contradiction.

I

saw Gandhi

only to be followed by violence in

all

s

at all

sensed a

non-violence gain freedom for India,

the world.

“hundred years of peace,” from Waterloo peace

I

I

realized that the vaunted

to the Battle of the

Marne, was not

but war, of Europe and North America on Africa and Asia, with

91

Race Concepts and the World of Color

only troubled

bits

of peace between the colonial conquerors.

I

saw Britain,

France, Belgium and North America trying to continue to force the world to

them by monopoly of land, technique and machines, backed by physical force which has now culminated in the use of atomic power. Only the sever

possession of this power by the Soviet

Union prevents the restoration of colonial imperialism of the West over Asia and Africa, under the leadership of men like [John Foster] Dulles and [Anthony] Eden. Perhaps in this extraordinary impasse the teachings of Mahatma Gandhi in the world.

Recent events

throw a curious light on

in the

former slave

may have

a

chance

territory of the

to prevail

United States

this possibility.

Montgomery, Alabama, the former capital of the Confederate States which fought for years to make America a slave nation, the black workers last year refused any longer to use the public buses on which their seats had long been segregated from those of the white passengers, paying the same fare. In In

addition to separation, there was abuse and insult by the white conductors.

This custom had continued

for

75 years.

Then

last

year a colored seamstress

got tired of insult and refused to give her seat to a white

workers led by young, educated ministers began a

strike

man. The black which stopped the

discrimination, aroused the state front of non-violence to

South.

and the nation and presented an unbending the murderous mob which hitherto has ruled the

The occurrence was

knowledge of Gandhi and

knew

extraordinary.

his work.

of non-resistance in India;

professional

men had

It

was not based on any first-hand

Their leaders

like

many of the educated

heard of Gandhi. But the

Martin Luther King

teachers, business

and

and spread of this movement was due to the truth of its underlying principles and not to direct teaching or propaganda. In this aspect it is a most interesting proof of the truth rise

of the Gandhian philosophy.

The American Negro is not yet free. He is still discriminated against, oppressed and exploited. The recent court decisions in his favor are excellent but are as yet only partially enforced. It may well be that the enforcement of these laws and real human equality and brotherhood in the United States will come only under the leadership of another Gandhi.

92

China and Africa

By courtesy of the government of the 680 million people of the Chinese Republic, I am permitted on my ninety-first birthday to speak to the people of China and Africa and through them to the world. Hail, then, and farewell, dwelling places of the yellow and black races. Hail I

human

kind!

speak with no authority: no assumption of age nor rank;

position,

I

One

have no wealth.

I

hold no

own and that is my own soul. my own country for near a century I

thing alone

Ownership of that I have even while in have been nothing but a “nigger.” On this

I

basis

and

this

alone

I

dare speak,

I

dare advise.

China after long centuries has arisen to her feet and leapt forward. Africa arise, and stand straight, speak and think! Act! Turn from the West and your slavery and humiliation for the last 500 years and face the rising sun. Behold a people, the

most populous nation on

and

shackles, not by boasting

strutting,

ancient earth which has burst

this

not by lying about

history

its

and

its

its

conquests, but by patience and long suffering, by hard, backbreaking labor

and with bowed head and blind crimson

sky.

She aims

men? Not simply

to

moved up and on toward the “make men holy; to make men free.” But what

the mandarins but including mandarins; not simply the

rich,

but not excluding the

edge

to the

end

struggle,

rich.

no man

that

Not simply the learned, but be poor, nor

shall

sick,

led by knowl-

nor ignorant; but that

the humblest worker as well as the sons of emperors shall be fed and taught

and healed and

that there

emerge on earth

a single unified people, free, well

and educated.

You have been

told,

my Africa: My Africa

in Africa

and

all

your children

s

children overseas; you have been told and the telling so beaten into you by rods

and whips,

that

mankind can only them; that only on From Peking Review

2

you believe

yourselves, that this

is

impossible; that

by walking on men; by cheating them and

killing

doormat of the despised and dying, the dead and

rotten.

rise

a

it

(March

3,

1959): 11-13.

93

Race Concepts and the World of Color

can

French cultural

a British aristocracy, a

nurtured and grown. This state,

is

a

lie. It is

elite or

an American millionaire be

an ancient

spread by church and

lie

spread by priest and historian, and believed in by fools and cowards, as

well as by the down-trodden

Speak, China, and

have been despised

tell

and the children of despair.

your truth

to Africa

and the world. What people

Who

more than you have been rejected of men? Recall when lordly Britishers threw the rickshaw money on the ground to avoid touching a filthy hand. Forget not, the time when in Shanghai no Chinaman dare set foot in a park which he paid for. Tell this to Africa, for today Africa stands on new feet, with new eyesight, with new brains and asks: Where am I and why? The Western sirens answer; Britain wheedles; France cajoles; while America, my America, where my ancestors and descendants for as

you have?

eight generations have lived

and

America loudest of all, yells and promises freedom. If only Africa allows American investment. Beware Africa, America bargains for your soul. America would have you believe that they toiled;

freed your grandchildren; that Afro-Americans are full treated like equals, paid fair

learn

and earn and

wages

as workers,

travel across the world.

promoted

This

is

American

for desert

not true.

citizens,

and

Some

free to

are near

freedom; some approach equality with whites; some have achieved education; but the price for this has too often been slavery of mind, distortion of truth and oppression of our still

own

people.

Of

18 million Afro-Americans, 12 million are

second-class citizens of the United States, serfs in farming, low-paid

and repressed members of union labor. Most American Negroes do not vote. Even the rising 6 million are liable to insult and discrimination at any time. But this, Africa, relates to your descendants, not to you. Once I thought of laborers in industry,

you Africans liberty.

I

as children,

was wrong.

We

whom we

educated Afro-Americans would lead to could not even lead ourselves, much less you. Today I

under your own leadership, guided by your own brains. Africa does not ask alms from China nor from the Soviet Union nor from France, Britain, nor the United States. It asks friendship and sympathy and no nation better than China can offer this to the Dark Continent. Let it be given freely and generously. Let Chinese visit Africa, send their scientists there and see you rising

their artists after

and

knowledge.

of information.

writers. L.et Africa It

On

Indian Federation to is

will

send

students to

not find on earth a richer goal, a

the other hand, watch the West.

is

to the control of British

dying under rich Haitian investors

Cuba

China and its seekers more promising mine

The new

British

West

not a form of democratic progress but a cunning attempt

reduce these islands

the peasantry.

its

and American

investors. Haiti

who with American money are

enslaving

showing what the West Indies, Central and South America are suffering under American Big Business. The American worker is

94

China and Africa

himself does not always realize

He

this.

many

has high wages and

comforts.

Rather than lose these, he keeps in office by his vote the servants of industrial exploitation so long as they maintain his wage. His labor leaders represent

and not the fight against the exploitation of labor by private These two sets of exploiters fall out only when one demands too large

exploitation capital.

This China knows. This Africa must learn. This the'

a share of the loot.

American Negro has friends

who

from your

failed so far to learn.

are flocking to Africa.

toil,

white Americans

America

is

struggling with. For this

frightened by the so-called trying to

as the

New

America

is

East

is

bound and

America,

slavery,

is still

as

soldiers.

What

shall

you do? is

freeing itself

while private capital in Britain, France, and

trying to maintain civilization

South

tempting your leaders, bribing

understand! Realize that the great mass of mankind

from wage

make money

seek by investment at high interest to

your young scholars, and arming your First,

am

Negro Americans

who

bind you in serfdom to business

I

and comfort

for a

now

in

few on the

and ignorance of the mass of men. Understand this, and understanding comes from direct knowledge. You know America and France and toil,

disease,

Britain to your sorrow. particularly

Now know the

Soviet

know China.

95

Union and

its

allied nations,

but

II

Personal Loyalties, Reflections,

and

Creative Pieces

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Jesus Christ in Texas

It

was

in

The that.”

Waco,

Texas.

convict guard laughed.

“I

don’t know,” he said,

He hesitated and looked at the stranger curiously.

“I

hadn’t thought of

In the

solemn

twilight

he got an impression of unusual height and soft, dark eyes. Curious sort of acquaintance for the colonel,” he thought; then he continued aloud: But that nigger there

bad, a born thief, and ought to be sent up for

life;

got ten years



time

last

is

Here the voice of the promoter, talking within, broke in; he was bending over his figures, sitting by the colonel. He was slight, with a sharp nose. “The convicts,” he said, “would cost us $96 a year and board. Well, we can squeeze

this so that

it

won’t be over $125 apiece.

Now

driven, they can build this line within twelve months.

next April. Freights will less

fall fifty

per cent.

It

if

these fellows are

will

Why, man, you’ll be

be running by a millionaire in

than ten years.”

The and

colonel started.

He was

a thick, short

man, with

a certain air of breeding about the lines of his

millionaire

sounded well

to his ears.

a clean-shaven face

countenance; the word

He thought — he thought a great deal; he

almost heard the puff of the fearfully costly automobile that was coming up the road, and he said:

suppose we might as well hire them.” “Of course,” answered the promoter.

“I

The

voice of the

“It will

tall

stranger in the corner broke in here:

be a good thing

for

them?” he

said, half in question.

colonel moved. “The guard makes strange friends,” he thought to rather himself. “What’s this man doing here, anyway?” He looked at him, or

The

looked

at his eyes,

“Well, at least,

From Darkwater:

and then somehow he felt a warming toward him. He it can’t harm them; they’re beyond that.”

Voices from Within the Veil (1920).

495

said:

The

Politics

and Propaganda of Arts and

do them good, then,”

“It will

said the stranger again.

1 he promoter shrugged his shoulders.

But the colonel shook

his

do us good,” he

“It will

head impatiently.

himself before those eyes, and he answered; “Yes,

any

rate

won t make them any worse than

it

something at

Letters

He it

felt a

will

they are.”

said.

desire to justify

do them good; or

Then he

at

started to say

but here sure enough the sound of the automobile breathing the gate stopped him and they all arose. “It

else,

settled, then,” said the

is

Yes,

promoter.

said the colonel, turning toward the stranger again. “Are

you going

town? he asked with the Southern courtesy of white men to white men in a country town. The stranger said he was. “Then come along in my machine. I want to talk with you about this.” into

They went out to at the convict.

the car. The stranger as he went turned again to look back

He was a tall, powerfully built black fellow.

with a low forehead, thick, hanging written about his

mouth

listlessly.

yellow, with a hunted, crafty look.

The

and

bitter eyes.

despite the hang-dog expression.

over his pile of stones, pounding

the eyes of the stranger.

lips,

His face was sullen,

The

The hammer

Beside

him

There was

He

revolt

stood bending

stood a boy of twelve

convict raised his eyes and they

fell

from



met

his hands.

stranger turned slowly toward the automobile

and the colonel

intro-

duced him. He had not exactly caught his name, but he mumbled something as he presented him to his wife and little girl, who were waiting. As they whirled away the colonel started to talk, but the stranger had taken the

little girl

into his lap

and together they conversed

in

low tones

all

the

way

home. In

some way, they

man was a

the

They rode

in the twdlight

drew up before the colonel

The

know how,

they got the impression that

teacher and, of course, he must be a foreigner.

like coat told this. last

did not exactly

s

The

long, cloak-

through the lighted town and

mansion, with

its

at

ghost-like pillars.

lady in the back seat was thinking of the guests she had invited to

dinner and was wondering

if

she ought not to ask

this

man

to stay.

He seemed

cultured and she supposed he was

would be

rather interesting to

daughter and the

“You

rector.

will enter

and

some acquaintance of the colonels. It have him there, with the judges wife and

She spoke almost before she thought*

rest

awhile?”

he colonel and the little girl insisted. For a moment the stranger seemed about to refuse. He said he had some business for his father, about town. Then I

for the child’s sake

he consented.

Up

the steps they went and into the dark parlor where they sat and talked a long time. It was a curious conversation. Afterwards they did not remember

496

Jesus Christ in Texas

what was

said

and

tion in that long,

low

talk.

exactly

Finally the nurse

yet they

came

all

remembered

a certain strange satisfac-

and the hostess bethought

for the reluctant child

herself:

“We

have a cup of tea; you

will

be dry and

will

tired.”

She rang and switched on a blaze of light. With one accord they all looked at the stranger, for they had hardly seen him well in the glooming twilight. The woman started in amazement and the colonel half rose in anger. Why, the man was a mulatto, surely; even if he did not own the Negro blood, their practised eyes

knew

it.

He was

Jewish gabardine. His hair

and

his face

was

olive,

A peremptory

tall

hung

and

straight

and the coat looked

in close curls far

down

like a

the sides of his face

even yellow.

order rose to the colonel’s

lips

and froze there

as

he caught

Those eyes — where had he seen those eyes before? He remembered them long years ago. The soft, tear-filled eyes of a brown girl. He remembered many things, and his face grew drawn and white. Those

the stranger’s eyes.

when

eyes kept burning into him, even

they were turned half away toward

the staircase, where the white figure of the child hovered with her nurse and waved good-night. The lady sank into her chair and thought: “What will the judge’s wife say? shall

we be

How

rid of

did the colonel

him?” She looked

come

at the

to invite this

man

here?

How

colonel in reproachful conster-

nation.

then the door opened and the old butler came in. He was an ancient black man, with tufted white hair, and he held before him a large, silver tray Just

filled

The stranger rose slowly and stretched the viands. The old man paused in bewilderment,

with a china tea service.

hands

as

if

to bless

and then with sudden gladness crashed to the

in his eyes

dropped

to his knees,

forth his tottered,

and the

tray

floor.

“My Lord and my God!” he

whispered; but the

woman

screamed:

“Mother’s china!”

The

doorbell rang.

“Heavens! here

is

the dinner party!” exclaimed the lady. She turned toward

She the door, but there in the hall, clad in her night clothes, was the little girl. had stolen down the stairs to see the stranger again, and the nurse above was calling in vain.

The woman

felt hysterical

and scolded

at the nurse,

but the

had stretched out his arms and with a glad cry the child nestled in them. They caught some words about the “Kingdom of Heaven” as he slowly

stranger

mounted

the stairs with his

little,

white burden.

The mother was glad of anything to get rid of the interloper, even for a moment. The bell rang again and she hastened toward the door, which the

497

The

loitering black

and

maid was

came

stranger as he

Politics

and Propaganda of Arts and Letters

just

slowly

opening. She did not notice the shadow of the

down

the stairs and paused by the newel post, dark

silent.

The judges

came

She was an old woman, frilled and powdered into a semblance of youth, and gorgeously gowned. She came forward, smiling with extended hands, but when she was opposite the stranger, somewhere a chill seemed to strike her and she shuddered and cried:

What

wife

drew

a draft!” as she

cordially; she forgot to ask

in.

a silken shawl about her

who the stranger was. The

thinking of a puzzling case of

and shook hands

judge strode in unseeing,

theft.

Eh? What? Oh — er — yes, — good evening,” he said, “good evening.” Behind them came a young woman in the glory of youth, and daintily silked, beautiful in face lightly,

but stopped with a

“Why, your

and form, with diamonds around her

— she

man

shadow of great,

And

neck. She

gasp; then she laughed gaily

beg your pardon. Was

I

gave me.”

little

fair

it

not curious?

thought

I

I

and

came

in

said:

saw there behind

he must be a servant, she argued — “the white wings. It was but the light on the drapery. What a turn it hesitated, but

she smiled again. With her

came

a

tall,

handsome, young

naval officer. Hearing his lady refer to the servant, he hardly looked at him, but held his gilded cap carelessly toward him, and the stranger placed it carefully

Last

on the

came

rack.

the rector, a

man

of

the stranger, stopped, and looked at “I

beg your pardon,” he

The

stranger

said. “I

and well-clothed. He

forty,

him

inquiringly.

beg your pardon

made no answer, and

started to pass



I

think

I

have met you?”

the hostess nervously hurried the guests

on. But the rector lingered and looked perplexed. “Surely,

vaguely to

The

know you. I have met you somewhere,” he said, putting his head. “You — you remember me, do you not?” I

stranger quietly swept his cloak aside,

relief passed

lady

to the hostess’

hand

unspeakable

out of the door.

d never knew you,” he said

The

and

his

in

low tones

as

he went.

murmured some vain excuse about intruders, but the

rector stood

with annoyance written on his face. “I

beg

a

pleasure to

him

thousand pardons,” he said to the hostess absently. “It is a great be here somehow I thought I knew that man. I am sure I knew



once.”

The stranger had passed down the

steps,

lingering at the top of the staircase, flew

and

down

as

after

he passed, the nurse, him, caught his cloak,

trembled, hesitated, and then kneeled in the dust.

He touched

her lightly with his hand and said: “Go, and sin no more!” With a glad cry the maid left the house, with its open door, and turned

498

Jesus Christ in Texas

The

north, running.

stranger turned eastw^ard into the night. As they parted a

long, low howl rose tremulously and reverberated through the night.

The

colonel’s wife within shuddered.

“The bloodhounds!” she

The

said.

rector answered carelessly:

“Another one of those convicts escaped, I suppose. Really, they need severer

Then he stopped. He was trying to remember that stranger’s name. The judge’s wife looked about for the draft and arranged her shawl. The girl

measures.”

glanced

at the

white drapery in the

over her and the

fires

of

burned

life

hall,

in

but the young officer was bending

her veins.

and died away. The stranger strode rapidly along the highway and out into the deep forest. There he paused and stood waiting, tall and still. A mile up the road behind a man was running, tall and powerful and black,

Howl

after

howl rose

in the night, swelled,

with crime-stained face and convicts’ stripes upon him, and shackles on his legs.

He

ran and jumped, in

little,

short steps,

and

his chains rang.

He fell and

howl of the hounds rang louder behind him. Into the forest he leapt and crept and jumped and ran, streaming with sweat; seeing the tall form rise before him, he stopped suddenly, dropped his rose again, while the

hands

in sullen

impotence, and sank panting

A greyhound

to the earth.

shot

out of the woods behind him, howled, whined, and fawned before the stranger’s feet. Hound after hound bayed, leapt, and lay there; then silently,

one by one, and with bowed heads, they crept backward toward the town. The stranger made a cup of his hands and gave the man water to drink, bathed his hot head, and gently took the chains and irons from his feet. By and by the convict stood up. Day was dawning above the treetops. He looked into the stranger’s face, and for a moment a gladness swept over the stains of his face.

“Wliy, you are a nigger, too,” he said.

Then

the convict

seemed anxious

never had no chance,” he said

“I

“Thou

to justify himself.

furtively.

shalt not steal,” said the stranger.

The man bridled. “But how about them? Can they steal? Didn’t they steal a whole year’s ” work, and then when I stole to keep from starving — He glanced at the stranger.

“No,

seem yes.

I

to

I’ll

The off his

didn’t steal just to

keep from

keep from

stealing.

Seems

starving.

like

when

I

I

stole to

be

see things,

I

stealing. just

I

can’t

must — but,

try!”

convict looked

down

long coat; he had put

at his striped clothes, it

but the stranger had taken

around him and the

499

stripes disappeared.

The

In the

house

new

Politics

and Propaganda of Arts and

opening morning the black

man

started toward the low, log farm-

in the distance, while. the stranger stood

glory in the day.

The

“You can sleep

watching him. There was a

black man’s face cleared up, and the farmer was

man worked

glad to get him. All day the black

The farmer gave him some

Letters

as

he had never worked before.

cold food.

he

in the barn,”

said,

and turned away.

“How much do git a day?” asked the black man. The farmer scowled. “Now see here,” said he. “If you’ll sign a contract for the season. I

I’ll

give

you

ten dollars a month.” “I

won’t sign no contract,” said the black

you

“Yes,

guard.”

The

will,” said

And he

man

doggedly.

the farmer, threateningly, “or

I’ll

call the

convict

grinned.

convict shrank and slouched to the barn. As night

fell

he looked out

and saw the farmer leave the place. Slowly he crept out and sneaked toward

He

the house.

looked through the kitchen door.

supper was spread

Then he looked the porch.

On

was beside

it

into the front

fled

back

He

stopped.

room and

— his hands were on field.

in terror felt

cloak-like coat

laid

it!

He saw

and around

it

He

one was

there, but the

out.

He ate ravenously.

He could

hear low voices on

and gone

listened.

the table lay a gold watch.

slouched toward the

He

had

as if the mistress

No

gazed

at

it,

and

in a

Quickly he slipped out of the house and

his

employer coming along the highway.

to the front of the house,

when suddenly he

the great, dark eyes of the stranger and saw the

where the stranger

sat

moment he

same

on the doorstep talking with the

dark,

mistress

of the house. Slowly, guiltily, he turned back, entered the kitchen, and laid the

watch

stealthily

stranger, with

where he had found

it;

then he rushed wildly back toward the

arms outstretched.

The woman had

laid

supper

house had walked out toward

for

her husband, and going

a neighbor’s.

She was gone but a

down from little

the

while, and

when she came back she started to see a dark figure on the doorsteps under the tall, red oak. She thought it was the new Negro until he said in a soft voice: “Will you give

Reassured

me

bread?”

at the voice of a

white man, she answered quickly in her

soft.

Southern tones:

“Why,

certainly.”

She was a little woman, and once had been pretty; but now her face was drawn with work and care. She was nervous and always thinking, wishing, wanting

for

something. She went in and got him some cornbread and a glass

came out and sat down beside' him. She began, quite unconsciously, to tell him about herself— the things she had done and had not done and the things she had wished for. She told him of her of cool, rich buttermilk; then she

500

Jesus Christ in Texas

husband and

this

new farm

niggers to work.

She

work. Even then

some

they were trying to buy. She said

said they

ought

ran away.

all to

be

in the

it

was hard

chain-gang and

to get

made

to

Only yesterday one had escaped, and another

the day before.

At

last

she gossiped of her neighbors,

how good

they were and

how

bad.

“And do you like them all?” asked the stranger. She hesitated. “Most of them,” she said; and then, looking up into his face and putting her hand into his, as though he w^ere her father, she said: “There are none I hate; no, none at all.” He looked away, holding her hand in his, and said dreamily: “You love your neighbor

She

hesitated.

“I try

the

as yourself?”

hill

— ” she began, and then looked the way he was looking; down under where

“They

lay a

little,

half-ruined cabin.

are niggers,” she said briefly.

He looked at her. Suddenly a confusion came over her and she

insisted,

she

knew not why. “But they are niggers!”

sudden impulse she arose and hurriedly lighted the lamp that stood just within the door, and held it above her head. She saw his dark face and curly hair. She shrieked in angry terror and rushed down the path, and just as

With

a

she rushed down, the black convict stretched.

They met

her and she

fell

came running up

with hands out-

and before be could stop he had run against earth and lay white and still. Her husband came

in mid-path,

heavily to

rushing around the house with a cry and an oath. “I

knew^

it,”

he

said. “It’s that

struggling to the earth

and

The

nigger.”

raised his voice to a yell.

He held the black man Down the highw'ay came

hound and mob and gun. They paused

the convict guard, with fields.

runaway

across the

farmer motioned to them.

“He — attacked — my

The mob

snarled

wdfe,”

he gasped.

and worked

silently.

hoisted the struggling, writhing black

w'oman. Right and

left, as

Right to the limb of the red oak they

man, while others

lifted

the dazed

she tottered to the house, she searched for the

stranger with a yearning, but the stranger was gone.

And

she told none of her

guests.

“No — no,

I

w^ant nothing,” she insisted, until they left her, as they thought,

mob. Then she rose. She shuddered as she heard the creaking of the limb where the body hung. But resolutely she crawled to the window- and peered out into the moonlight; she saw the dead man writhe. He stretched his arms out like a

asleep. For a time she lay

still,

listening to the departure of the

501

The

cross,

and Propaganda of Arts and

Politics

looking upward. She gasped and clung to the

swaying body, and down where the flashed

up amid the

through the terror rise.

sky

in

far-off

little,

Behind the

sill.

half-ruined cabin lay, a single flame

shout and cry of the mob.

into

A

one great crimson column

and threw great arms athwart the gloom

crimson

window

fierce joy

sobbed up

her soul and then sank abashed as she watched the flame

Suddenly whirling

the roped

Letters

until

it

shot to the top of the

above the world and behind

and swaying form below hung quivering and burning

a great

cross.

She hid her

dizzy,

she knew. Her dry '‘Despised

aching head

lips

in

an agony of tears, and dared not look,

for

moved:

and rejected of men.”

She knew, and the very horror of

it

lifted

her dull and shrinking eyelids.

There, heaven-tall, earth-wide, hung the stranger on the crimson

cross, riven

and bloodstained, with thorn-crowned head and pierced hands. She stretched her arms and shrieked.

He

did not hear.

fastened

He

did not see. His

on the writhing,

twisting

calm dark

body of the

thief,

the winds of the night, saying:

“This day thou shalt be with

me

in Paradise!”

502

eyes, all sorrowful,

and

a voice

were

came out

of

The Younger

There have been times when we the procession of those

writers of the older set

who seek to express the life

thinning and that none were coming forward to

Dunbar

is

dead; Chesnutt

silent;

is

Movement

Literary

fill

have been afraid that

of the American Negro was the footsteps of the fathers.

and Kelly Miller

is

mooning

after false

Woodson are writing history rather than literature. But even as we ask “Where are the young Negro artists to mold and weld this mighty material about us?” — even as we ask, they eome.

gods while Brawley and

There are two books before me, which, if I mistake not, will mark an epoch: a novel by Jessie Fauset and a book of stories and poems by Jean Toomer. There are besides these, five poets writing; Langston Hughes,

Countee Cullen, Georgia Johnson, Gwendolyn Bennett and Claude McKay. Finally, Negro men are appearing as essayists and reviewers, like Walter Wlfite and Eric Walrond. (And even as I write comes the news that a novel by Mr. White has just found a publisher.) Here then is promise sufficient to attract us.

We “Song

recognize the exquisite abandon of a for a Banjo.”

He

new day

in

Langston Hughes’

sings:

Shake your brown Shake 'em Liza,

feet,

Liza,

chile.

Shake your brown (The music's

feet,

soft

Shake your brown

Liza,

and

feet,

wile).

Liza,

(The Banjo's sobbin low).

The

sun's goin'

Might never

Countee Cullen

Crisis,

rise

itself.

There

this very night



no mo'.

Brown Girl” achieves eight lyric in Claude McKay’s “If We Must

in his “Ballad of the

that are as true as life

From The

down

is

February 1924.

503

lines

Die’

The

Politics

and Propaganda of Arts and Letters

and mutinous. There are other echoes — two from dead poets Jamison and Cotter who achieved in their young years long life if not immora strain martial

tality.

But

this essay

is

of two books.

The world of black folk will some day arise and point to Jean Toomer as a writer who first dared to emancipate the colored world from the conventions of sex. It is quite impossible for most Americans to realize how straitlaced and conventional thought

is

within the Negro World, despite the very unconven-

tional acts of the group. Yet this contradiction first

is

And

true.

Jean

Toomer

is

the

of our writers to hurl his pen across the very face of our sex conven-

one has only

tionality. In ‘'Cane,”

realize this;

Here

woman; Carma,

characters seriatim to

Amazon of unbridled desire; Fern, an unconscious woman who looks age and bastardy in the face and flees in

a tender

despair; Louise, with a white

and

and Doris, the cheap chorus is

women

Karintha, an innocent prostitute; Becky, a fallen white

is

wanton; Esther, a

frankness that

to take his

going

to

a black lover; Avey, unfeeling

These

girl.

make

and unmoral;

women, painted with

are his

and

his black readers shrink

criticize;

and

a

yet

they are done with a certain splendid, careless truth.

Toomer does not impress me know human beings; and, from and heard of

all his life

true, not with

color.

He

is

apparently filled

when

an

Dutch artist

undue

one who knows

as

the background

through the

which he has seen

with words but a conscious

On

with felicitous phrases

slightly

of others, he paints things that are

lips

exactness, but rather with an impressionist’s

striving for effect.

the sun goes

Ceorgia but he does

his

artist

the other

who

hand

sweep of

offends often by his

his

powerful book

is

— Karintha, “carrying beauty perfect as the dusk

down” — “HdfrSilver-grey

Like streams of stars''

Or

again, “face flowed into her eyes

plaintive ripples.” His

does not that

he has

felt

or

even impossible

make

his art a

the other the

life

he

feel that

hand

feels

understand.

puzzle

am

me

is.

His

art carries

I

much

that

irritated

whole world by

this sort

why Toomer could degree and

504

shows

difficult or

is

is

a puzzle) but

of thing.

not have

I

am

on

I

cannot, for

made

the tragedy

could understand instead of vaguely guess

to the last

One

of course, has a right deliberately to

to the interpreter (the

of Carma something that

creamy foam and

yet the ferv'or of his descriptions

The artist,

myself unduly

in soft

most part entirely objective.

for the

much and

of me, for instance see

Seat” muddles

is

knows what feeling

to

I

emotion

— flowed

not sure that

I

at;

“Box

know what

The Younger

“Kabnis”

is

Literary

Movement

stand them, have their strange flashes of power, their

numberless reasons

Toomer

strikes

watching

which

me

for being.

as a

But

man who

still

me

I

they are partially spoiled.

has written a powerful book but

for the fullness of his strength

will

for

when

do not undernumerous messages and

about. All of these essays and stories, even

undoubtedly come with

and

years.

505

for that

who

is still

calm certainty of his

art

A Negro

Art Renaissance

Walter Damrosch was recently the chief figure in handing Roland Hayes the Spingarn medal. This medal is bestowed each year on the American Negro

who

does the most notable ser\dce for his race. In noting Mr. Hayes’s achievement, Mr. Damrosch alluded to the brief history behind the American Negro

and dated

his cultural

development

in literature

and

art

from the Emancipa-

tion Proclamation in 1863.

Mr. Damrosch spoke

good

in

common current error. No

and with the best will and but repeated a human group can begin anything in the middle of faith

the nineteenth century. Wliatever the historical breaks and partial lack of continuity, the history of all

ment

human

and the

despite slavery

groups and races

slave trade,

is

a

continuous develop-

which made surely

Negro development, nevertheless there is today nius, which is bringing a new and peculiar turn

a vast hiatus in

a renaissance of to

what we

Negro

call the

ge-

“Negro

problem.”

Look round you

who

last

a

moment

Here

to realize this:

is

a great

new

lyric

tenor

year was soloist to every great American orchestra and sang to

crowded houses from Boston to San Francisco and in London, Paris, Vienna and Berlin; he was black. This month. Vanity Fair, a periodical catering to popular taste and not to propaganda and reform, gives a page to a black boy’s poems, and Harper Brothers are publishing colored folk are appearing, and two

and Walter White’s

short-story writer has

Negro

essayists

and

Fire

had

last year, Jessie Fauset’s

six stories

is

Legion of Honor; but he colored From

artist

There

Is

in

Novels by

Confusion

A

colored

once by Atlantic Monthly. the American Vlercury, the Forum,

accepted

have recently appeared

H. O. lanner,

verse.

the Flint, attracted wide attention.

the Century and other leading periodicals. artists,

volume of his

a

at

The dean

of present

American

of Negro descent and has just received the French is

not alone; in the recent Chicago

received three prizes and in the

the lx)s Angeles Times, June 14, 1925,

pt. 5,

26-27.

506

last, fifty-six

art exhibit

colored

artists

one

have

A

received distinction.

On

Negro Art Renaissance

the stage

ments of the older Negro comedy Florence Mills, but a

new

we have seen

not only the

new

develop-

and Blake, Miller and Lyle and tragedy in Charles Gilpin and Paul

in Sissle

[kind of]

Robeson. In

all

competitions thrown open

fairly to all

children are winning prizes and preferment as

American children, Negro in college scholarships and

fellowships, musical prizes offered by the Juilliard Foundation

The

significant thing, however,

Frederick Douglass, Paul Laurence

But the present movement tinctly

and

definitely based

Negro

history of the

race.

is

in

America

like Phillis

Dunbar and Booker

on new knowledge of and

Wheat-

T. Washington.

not simply individually American

One

like.

not individual Negro distinction. There

is

have always been cases of exceptional Negroes ley,

and the

inspiration



it

is

dis-

from the past

has but to read a few stanzas of Countee

poem, the “Shroud of Color” to realize this, or to see the young black artist’s new enthusiasm for Negro and colored pastimes. In the last decade or so the world and the American Negro have rediscovered Africa and her marvelous history. All the chronicle of Ethiopia and Cullen

s

great

kingdom of the Sudan, all that marvelous primitive art of the West African coast, all the legend and history handed down by generations of black folk has been long unknown in America and forgotten by Europe because of the propaganda of slavery and the slave trade. France rediscovered African art and based a new school of art upon it. Germany revealed something of the wealth of African literature; and England

the

and America have been uncovering the buried history of Egypt and Ethiopia and Nigeria. At first there was passionate assertion, particularly in the last two lands which had bitter racial “problems,” that none of these Africans were “Negroes”; until, Habzel pointed out some time ago, we were making so arbitrary and fanciful definition of “Negro” that we were about to leave no Negroes is

at all

among

no greater than

the black and

that of Europe.

brown

The

folk of Africa,

“black” race

is

as

whose race vague

diversity

for scientific

definitions as the “white.”

The Great War knocked much we

of this nonsense from our heads and today

are beginning to realize that the history of man in Africa has paralleled the

history of

man

in

Europe and

To American Negroes, long deprived of which meant humiliation and despair, this

Asia.

the importance of a past, save that

new and growing enthusiasm for Nowhere is this better seen than in the new drama. The Negro

renaissance of knowledge has brought the self-expression.

was long shut

off

from the theatre by the Puritan

misfit of prejudice

which

of the auditor’s seats in the best theaters. But an essentially dramatic people with a history perhaps the most dramatic the world has known, could not be kept from self-expression in the drama. Beginning with

shut

him out

507

The

Politics

and Propaganda of Arts and Letters

Negro comedy, they sought to introduce bits of romance and tragedy here and there as in Cole and Johnson’s Red Moon and the dramatic recitals of scores from Edward Nahar to Richard catering to the white folks’ love of

Harrison

— they

turned finally and gradually

brought amateur plays

to

to their

own

people.

They

churches, did Shakespeare in schools and attempted

pageantry.

Los Angeles

is

going to have an opportunity of seeing

at

the Hollywood

Bowl June 15 and 18, the most ambitious pictorial pageant which American Negroes have attempted. This pageant, known as the “Star of Ethiopia,” has been given three times — in New York in 1913 to celebrate a half-century of emancipation; in Washington, D.C., in 1915 to commemorate the Fifteenth Amendment; in Philadelphia in 1916 to celebrate the one hundredth anniversary of the founding of the African Episcopal

Church.

This year at the request of the citizens of Los Angeles the pageant here and rehearsals have been in progress four weeks. professional actors, with

It is

Negro

508

race.

.

.

.

brought

a folk play with

most of the costumes home-made; and

the history, real and legendaryn of the

is

is

no

based on

Negro Art

Criteria of

I

do not doubt but there are some

audience

in this

who

are a

the subject of this meeting, and particularly at the subject

people are thinking something this, a

group of radicals trying

I

little

disturbed at

have chosen. Such

“How is it that an organization like new things into the world, a fighting

like this:

to bring

come up out of the blood and dust of battle, struggling men to be ordinary human beings — how is it that an

organization which has for the right of

black

organization of this kind can turn aside to talk about art? After

we who are slaves and black to do with art?” Or perhaps there are others who feel a certain all it is

rather satisfactory after

all this talk

about

and are

relief

rights

all,

what have

saying, “After

and fighting

to sit

and

dream of something which leaves a nice taste in the mouth.” Let me tell you that neither of these groups is right. The thing we are talking about tonight is part of the great fight we are carrying on and it represents a forward and an upward look — a pushing onward. You and I have been breasting hills; we have been climbing upward; there has been progress and we can see it day by day looking back along blood-filled paths. But as you go through the valleys and over the foothills, so long as you are climbing, the direction

— north, south, east or west —

ally the vista

widens and you begin

horizon, then

what you \Vliat

night

with

it

all

it is

is

of less importance. But

to see the

world

at

when

gradu-

your feet and the

far

time to know more precisely whether you are going and

really want.

do we want? Wliat

had

a certain truth:

is

the thing

we

are after? As

was phrased

last

We want to be Americans, full-fledged Americans,

the rights of other American citizens. But

simply to be Americans?

it

Once

in a

while through

all

Do we

want

of us there flashes

some

is

that all?

some clear idea, of what America really is. We who are dark can see America in a way that white Americans cannot. And seeing our country thus, are we satisfied with its present goals and ideals? claiiA^oyance,

.

From The

Crisis,

October 1926.

509

.

.

The

and Propaganda of Arts and

Politics

Letters

you tonight suddenly should become full-fledged Americans; if your color faded, or the color line here in Chicago was miraculously forgotten; If

same time rich and powerful — what is it that you would want? What would you immediately seek? Would you buy the most powerful of motor cars and outrace Cook County? Would you buy the most suppose, too, you

became

at the

on the North Shore? Would you be a Rotarian or a Lion or a What-not of the very last degree? Would you wear the most striking clothes, give the richest dinners, and buy the longest press notices? Even as you visualize such ideals you know in your hearts that these are not elaborate estate

the things you really want.

realize this sooner than the average white

You

American because, pushed aside to us

as

we have been

in

America, there has

come

not only a certain distaste for the tawdry and flamboyant but a vision of

what the world could be spirit; if

we had

if it

were

really a beautiful world;

if

we had

the seeing eye, the cunning hand, the feeling heart;

the true

if

we

had,

be sure, not perfect happiness, but plenty of good hard work, the inevitable but suffering that always comes with life; sacrifice and waiting, all that to



nevertheless lived in a world where realize themselves

and where they enjoy

to create for ourselves

After

all,

who

men know, where men create, where they

and

for all

shall describe

life. It is

that sort of a world

we want

America.

Beauty?

What

remember

is it? I

tonight four

beautiful things: the cathedral at Cologne, a forest in stone, set in light

and

changing shadow, echoing with sunlight and solemn song; a village of the Veys in West Africa, a little thing of mauve and purple, quiet, lying content

and velvet room where on a throne rests, in old and yellowing marble, the broken curves of the Venus de Milo; a single phrase of music in the South — utter melody, haunting and appealing, suddenly and shining

in the sun; a black

arising out of night

Such

is

beauty.

and

Its

eternity,

variety

is

beneath the moon.

infinite,

its

possibility

is

endless. In

normal

life

may have it and have it yet again. The world is full of it; and yet today the mass of human beings are choked away from it, and their lives distorted and made ugly. This is not only wrong, it is silly. Who shall right this well-nigh

all

universal failing?

men

Who shall

let this

world be beautiful? Wlio shall restore

to

the glory of sunsets and the peace of quiet sleep?

We

black folk

stirrings

may

help for

of the beginning of a

we have within us as a new appreciation of joy,

race

of a

new new

stirrings;

desire to

new will to be; as though in this morning of group life we had awakened from some sleep that at once dimly mourns the past and dreams a splendid future; and there has come the conviction that the youth that is here today, the Negro youth, is a different kind of youth, because in some, new way it bears this mighty prophecy on its breast, with a new realization of itself, with new determination for all mankind. create, of a

510

Criteria of Negro Art

Wliat has truth

this

beauty to do with the world?

and goodness — with the

“Nothing,” the

artists

facts of the

evil

b*e right.

I

am

but an humble

and cannot presume to say. am one who tells the truth and and seeks with beauty and for beauty to set the world right. That

disciple of art

exposes

has beauty to do with

world and the right actions of men?

They may

rush to answer.

What

1

somehow, somewhere

and perfect beauty sits above truth and can conceive, but here and now and in the world in which I work they me unseparated and inseparable. This

is

brought

eternal

to us peculiarly

come

when

— and

as artists

we

face our

own

right

I

are for

past as a

come especially through the man we are going to honor tonight [Carter Godwin Woodson, 12th Spingarn Medalist] — a realization of that past, of which for long years we have been ashamed, for which we have apologized. We thought nothing could come out of that past which we wanted to remember; which we wanted to hand down to people. There has

to us

it

has

same past is taking on form, color, and reality, and in a half shame-faced way we are beginning to be proud of it. We are remembering that the romance of the world did not die and lie forgotten in the Middle Ages; that if you want romance to deal with you must have it here and now and in your own hands. Have you heard the story of the conquest of German East Africa? Listen to the untold tale: There were 40,000 black men and 4,000 white men who talked German. There were 20,000 black men and 12,000 white men who talked English. There were 10,000 black men and 400 white men who talked Erench. In Africa then where the Mountains of the Moon raised their white and snowcapped heads into the mouth of the tropic sun, where Nile and Congo rise and the Great Lakes swim, these men fought; they struggled on mountain, hill and valley, in river, lake and swamp, until in masses they sickened, crawled and died; until the 4,000 white Germans had become mostly bleached bones; until nearly all the 12,000 white Englishmen had returned to South Africa, and the 400 Erenchmen to Belgium and heaven; all our children. Suddenly,

this

.

.

.

except a mere handful of the white

men

died; but thousands of black

men

from East, West and South Africa, from Nigeria and the Valley of the Nile,

and from the West Indies fought and

won and

still

struggled, fought

German

and

East Africa; and

died. Lor four years they

you hear about

it is

that

England and Belgium conquered German Africa for the allies! Such is the true and stirring stuff of which romance is born and from

this

stuff

come

of material

lost

the stirrings of men is

theirs;

and

who

all

are beginning to

this vital life

of their

remember

own kind

is

that this kind

beckoning them on.

The question comes next as to the interpretation of these new stirrings, of this new spirit: Of what is the colored artist capable? We have had on the part of both colored and white people singular unanimity of judgment

511

in the past.

The

Colored people have

Politics

said:

and Propaganda of Arts and

by colored people.” But today there

man

is

comes from because it is done

“This work must be inferior because

colored people.” White people have said:

work of the black

Letters

“It

coming

is

is

to

inferior

it

both the realization that the

not always inferior. Interesting stories

come

to us.

.

.

.

With the growing recognition of Negro artists in spite of the severe handicaps, one comforting thing is occurring to both white and black. They are whispering, “Here is a way out. Here is the real solution of the color problem. The recognition accorded Cullen, Hughes, Fauset, Wliite and others shows there

no

is

Keep

real color line.

Don’t complain! Work! All

quiet!

will

be

well!” I

will

not say that already this chorus amounts to a conspiracy. Perhaps

naturally too suspicious. But

of white people writers

They

who

“What

is

will say that there are

today a surprising

are getting great satisfaction out of these

because they think

say,

I

it is

I

am

number

younger Negro

going to stop agitation of the Negro question.

the use of your fighting and complaining; do the great

And many colored people are all too eager to follow this advice; especially those who weary of the eternal struggle along the color line, who are afraid to fight and to whom the money of philanthropists and the alluring publicity are subtle and deadly bribes. They say, “What is the use of fighting? Wliy not show simply what we deserve and let the reward come to us?” And it is right here that the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People comes upon the field, comes with its great call to a new battle, a new fight and new things to fight before the old things are wholly won; and thing and the reward

to say that the

is

there.”

beauty of truth and freedom which shall some day be our

men

heritage and the heritage of all civilized

we

ourselves must not

There little

in

is

fail

New York

not in our hands yet and that

to realize.

woman molding

tonight a black

bare room, because there

where she

is

is

clay by herself in a

not a single school of sculpture in

New York

welcome. Surely there are doors she might burst through, but makes a sculptor He does not always make the pushing sort of

is

when Cod person who

beats his

way through doors

thrust in his face. This girl

is

working

her hands off to get out of this country so that she can get some sort of training. ’Phere was Richard Brown.

If

he had been white he would have been

alive

Many helped him when he asked but he was not the kind of boy that always asks. He was simply one who made colors sing. There is a colored woman in Chicago who is a great musician. She thought she would like to study at Fontainebleau this summer where Walter Damtoday instead of dead of neglect.

rosch and a score of leaders of art have an American school of music. But the application blank of this school says:

“I

am

admission to the school.”

512

a white

American and

I

apply for

Criteria of Negro Art

We can go on the stage; we can be just as funny as white Americans wish us can play

to be; w'e

but

the sordid parts that America likes to assign to Negroes;

all

anything else there

for

is still

small place for us.

And so might go on. But let me sum up with this: Suppose the only Negro who survived some centuries hence was the Negro painted by white Americans in the novels and essays they have written. What would people in a I

hundred

years say of black Americans?

to write a story

and put

You might

it

get

in

is

The

not interesting”

around. Suppose you were

know and like and And the “might not”

imagine. is still

far

white publishers catering to white folk would

— to

white

folk, naturally not.

Toms, Topsies, good “darkies” and clowns. the earmarks of truth.

it

the kind of people you

published and you might not.

bigger than the “might.” say, “It

it

Now turn

A young man

I

have

he

says that

in

They want Uncle

my office

a story with all

started out to write

and had

Then he began to write about the things he knew best about, that is, about his own people. He submitted a story to a magazine which said, “We are sorry, but we cannot take it.” “I sat down and revised my story, his stories accepted.

changing the color of the characters and the locale and sent

it

under an

assumed name with a change of address and it was accepted by the same magazine that had refused it, the editor promising to take anything else I might send

in providing

it

was good enough.”

We have, to be sure, a few are not

all

those

remnants of that tion

fit

recognized and successful Negro

to survive or

ability

raised

but they

even a good minority. They are but the

whom

and genius among us

and opportunity have

artists;

on the

are not altogether peculiar in this. After

waves of chance.

tidal all,

the accidents of educa-

world

in the

We

at large,

black folk

it is

only the

make the most of itself; but if infinitely more true of the colored world. It is

accident, the remnant, that gets the chance to this

is

true of the white world

it is

not simply the great clear tenor of Roland Hayes that opened the ears of

America.

and

is

put

its

as

We have had many voices of all kinds as fine as his and America was

deaf as she was for years to him.

imprint on

bery woke up.

Then

a foreign land heard

him and immediately America with

We

all its

Hayes and

imitative snob-

approved Hayes because London, Paris and Berlin ap-

proved him and not simply because he was a great singer.

Thus

it is

the

bounden duty of black America

begin

to

this great

work of the

creation of beauty, of the preservation of beauty, of the realization of beauty,

and we must use

in this

what have been the the truth

upon

work

all

the methods that

tools of the artist in times

men

gone by?

have used before. And First of all,

he has used

— not for the sake of truth, not as a scientist seeking truth, but as one

whom

truth eternally thrusts itself as the highest

handmaid of imagina-

one great vehicle of universal understanding. Again artists have used goodness — goodness in all its aspects of justice, honor, and right — not

tion, as the

513

The

Politics

and Propaganda of Arts and Letters

but as the one true method of gaining sympathy

for sake of an ethical sanction

and human

The

interest.

becomes the

apostle of beauty thus

choice but by inner and outer compulsion. Free he

bounded by the right to

Thus purists.

and

truth

tell

and

justice;

right not by

and

apostle of truth

but his freedom

is

him when he

slavery only dogs

is

is

ever

denied

the truth or recognize an ideal of justice.

propaganda and ever must be, despite the wailing of the stand in utter shamelessness and say that whatever art I have for

all art is I

writing has been used always for propaganda for gaining the right of black folk

do not care a damn for any art propaganda. But I do care when propaganda is confined

and enjoy.

to love

other

is

stripped

that

I

and

silent.

.

.

to

not used for

is

one side while the

.

You know the current magazine story: a young white man goes down to Central America and the most beautiful colored woman there falls in love with him. She crawls across the whole isthmus to get to him. The white man says nobly, “No.”

In such cases,

blood divine, right of

New York.

it is

not the positive propaganda of people

who believe

infallible,

propaganda

inspired with this

goes back to his white sweetheart in

He

new

to those

because they have so

and

why does he do

which

to

who

field.

little

They

freedom

I

It is

White

human,

artists

lovable,

Because he cannot do

this?

DuBose Heywood

if

a similar thing for the

drum him

human

should not be surprised

out of town.

The

degradation was to

Octavius Roy

to write

But

white

only chance

tell it

of colored

Cohen had approached

to write

the

about a different kind of

colored folk than the monstrosities he has created; but

“No. You are getting paid

and

themselves suffer from

in dealing with whites.

Saturday Evening Post and asked permission

replied,

the denial of a similar

writes beautifully of the black Charleston underworld.

to tell the truth of pitiful

people.

object.

cry for freedom in dealing with Negroes

people of Charleston, or they would

he had

I

believe black blood

ideals for the world.

narrowing of their

writes “Porgy”

and holy

white

if

he

has, the Post has

about the kind of colored people

you are writing about.” In other words, the white public today pictorial, racial far as

its

pre-judgment which deliberately

colored races are concerned, and

On

demands from

it

will

its artists,

distorts truth

pay

for

no

literary

and

and

justice, as

other.

young and slowly growing black public still wants prophets almost equally unfree. We are bound by all sorts of customs that

have

the other hand, the

come down

as

second-hand soul clothes of white patrons.

We

are

ashamed of sex and we lower our eyes when people will talk of it. Our religion holds us in superstition. Our worst side has been so shamelessly emphasized that

we

are denying

hemmed

in

we have

or ever

and our new' young

had

artists

a worst side. In all sorts of ways

have got

514

to fight their w'ay to

we

are

freedom.

Criteria of Negro Art

The up

ultimate judge has got to be you and you have got to build yourselves

wide judgment, that catholicity of temper which is going to enable the artist to have his widest chance for freedom. We can afford the into that

truth.

White

folk today cannot.

a white jury. If a colored

As

now we

it is

man wants to publish

publisher and a white newspaper to say

We

must come

it is

are

handing everything over

a book,

great;

he has got

to get a

and then you and

I

to

white

say so.

where the work of art when it appears is reviewed and acclaimed by our own free and unfettered judgment. And we are going to have a real and valuable and eternal judgment only as we make ourselves free to the place

of mind, proud of body and just of soul to

And then do you know what will be

all

said?

men.

It is

already saying. Just as soon as

true art emerges; just as soon as the black artist appears,

race on the shoulder

and

says,

“He

someone touches

did that because he was an American, not

because he was a Negro; he was born here; he was trained here; he

Negro — what ought I

is

a

Negro anyhow? He

is

just

human;

it is

is

not a

the kind of thing you

to expect.''

do not doubt that the ultimate

just as beautiful,

from white

and beautiful

art

largely

folk, or yellow, or red;

coming from black folk is going to be in the same ways, as the art that comes

but the point today

is

that until the art of the

black folk compels recognition they will not be rated as

through

art

their art

is

I

the

had

they compel recognition then

as

new

as

a classmate

it is

let

human. And when

the world discover

if it

will that

old and as old as new.

once who did three beautiful things and

died.

One

of

them was a story of a folk who found fire and then went wandering in the gloom of night seeking again the stars they had once known and lost; suddenly out of blackness they looked up and there loomed the heavens; and what was it that they said? They raised a mighty cry; “It is the stars, it is the ancient stars, it is the young and everlasting stars!"

515

On

Carl Van Vechten’s

Nigger Heaven

Carl Van Vechten’s “Nigger Heaven”

is

blow

a

in the face.

an affront

It is

the hospitality of black folk and to the intelligence of white. First, as to

my

title:

“Nigger”

objection is

to its

based on no provincial dislike of the nickname.

is

an English word of wide use and definite connotation. As

employed by Conrad, Sheldon, Allen and even Firbanks, its use was justifiable. But the phrase, “Nigger Heaven,” as applied to Harlem is a misnomer. “Nigger Heaven” does not mean, as Van Vechten once or twice intimates, (pages 15, 199) a haven for Negroes souls;

it

means

and yet

folk are herded,

enough better

parlance, a nasty, sordid corner into which black

which they

a place

to enjoy.

after all, a title

fidelity to truth

artistic.

It

is

is

and

only a its

and

title,

artistic merit.

justifiable impressionistic exaggeration.

where

in

it

is

a

mass of

ignorance are fools

in crass

as that,

and no one knows

this

a

book must be judged eventually by

I

find this novel neither truthful nor

not a true picture of Harlem

untruth because

of refuge for dark and tired

city

Harlem is no such place than Carl Van Vechten.

But its

common

in

—a

It

is

half-truths.

life,

even allowing for some

a caricature.

It

is

worse than

Probably some time and some-

Harlem every incident of the book has happened; and

resultant picture built out of these parts

is

yet the

and

ludicrously out of focus

undeniably misleading. I

is

he author counts among

numbers of Negroes of all

his friends

an authority on dives and cabarets. But he masses

rule or reason

and seeks

black cabaret

is

stage of action.

to express all of

Harlem; around

Such

it

a theory of

Harlem

all his

Harlem

life in its

is

nonsense.

Crisis,

December

1926.

516

The

He

knowledge without

To him the Here is their

cabarets.

characters gravitate.

majority of black folk there never go to cabarets. From The

this

classes.

The overwhelming

average colored

man

On

Carl Van Vechtens Nigger Heaven

Harlem is an everyday and as conservative and

church,

attending

laborer,

and movie

lodge

working

as conventional as ordinary

folk every-

where.

Something they have which be found; but

something

racial,

is

expressed by subtle, almost delicate nuance, and not by the

it is

wildly, barbaric

drunken orgy

laughter, color

and spontaneity

whose

in

details

Harlem

at

enwrapped with cheaper

stuff that

genuine exhibition of the all this

Van Vechten

revels.

There

is

core, but in the current cabaret,

s

New York, this core

financed and supported largely by white

To

Negroid can

distinctively

no one but

is

so overlaid

could mistake

a fool

it

and

for the

of the people.

spirit

the author has a right to reply that even

the

if

an unhappy

title is

catch-phrase for penny purposes and his picture of truth untruthful, that his

book has

a right to

entertain?

who

a

Is it

good and human

and

likes stories

view. “Nigger

be judged primarily

I

Heaven”

do not is

to

story? In

insist that

drama. Real

human

Byron and Mary

Compare and

is

feelings are

in

not;

I

my point of

wearisome hodgepodge of

at.

Love

that of Lasca

is

degraded.

and Byron

his degradation,

“Nigger Heaven” there

is

The

love of

simply nasty.

is

Porgy

is

human

not a single loveable charac-

scarcely a generous impulse or a beautiful ideal.

are singularly

and

Does it am one

being nothing but cheap melo-

to

laughed

and

it is

please?

and expressions, illuminated here and

comes near

stark cruelty

But

my opinion

it

they be written solely for

slum picture with Porgy. In

this

interesting.

There

ter.

is

work of art. Does

me an astonishing and

laboriously stated facts, quotations

there with something that

as a

wooden and inhuman. Van Vechten

is

The

characters

not the great

artist

who

To him there are no depths. It is the surface mud he slops about in. His women’s bodies have no souls; no children palpitate upon his hands; he has never looked upon his dead with bitter tears. Life to him is just one damned orgy after another, with with remorseless scalpel probes the awful depths of life.

and sadism. Both Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten know Harlem

hate, hurt, gin

it is

cabarets; but

Hughes who whispers “One

said

When Van Vechten never heard

he heard the jazz band sob

the

little

dawn was

a sob in a cabaret. All

grey.”

he hears

Again and again with singular lack of invention he of two creatures tearing and scratching over

is

noise

and

reverts to the

“mah man”;

brawling.-

same climax

lost souls

who once

had women’s bodies; and to Van Vechten this spells comedy, not tragedy. I seem to see that Mr. Van Vechten began a good tale with the promising figure of Anatol, but that he keeps turning aside to write in from his notebook

517

The

Politics

and Propaganda of Arts and Letters

every fact he has heard about Negroes and their problems; singularly irrele-

vant quotations, Haitian history, Chesnutt s novels, race-poetry, “blues” writ-

which are in most cases have only to compare their

ten by white folk. Into this mass he drops characters thin disguises; life

and

climax

and those who know the

originals

this death, to realize the failure in truth is

an

utterly senseless

and human

interest.

The

final

murder which appears without preparation or

reason from the clouds. I

cannot

for the life of

me

thought, or truthful industry.

It

see in this

seems

to

work

me

that

either sincerity or art,

Mr. Van Vechten

deep

tried to

do

something bizarre and he certainly succeeded. I read “Nigger Heaven” and read it through because I had to. But I advise others who are impelled by a sense of duty or curiosity to drop the book gently in the grate and to try the Police Gazette.

518

Mencken

Many

colored people have undertaken to answer Mr. Mencken’s remarks

Most of them apparently make the mistake of questioning his attitude rather than his facts. There can be no question of H.L. Mencken’s attitude toward Negroes. It is calmly and judiciously fair. He neither loves nor hates them. He has a predilection for men. But he, like many other Americans, does not understand just where the shoe pinches. When American artists of Negro descent have work worth while about Negro

artists.

he believes that they are not barred by magazines or publishers. Of course But the point

is

themes on which Negro

that the

not.

writers naturally write best,

with deepest knowledge and clearest understanding, are precisely the themes

most

editors

tired of or

do not want

do not wish

to hear.

He

These are themes which white readers are What is the “freedom” cry to a white American

treated.

up on this which is the breath of life to black folk. While the feelings of insulted men, their reaction to the color line — well this he will not read about. Consequently the chief reading public in America

or “discrimination”?

will

is

fed

not buy precisely the sort of thing that Negroes must write about

if they

are

sincere and honest.

White Americans about Negroes

are willing to read about Negroes, but they prefer to read

who are

fools,

clowns, prostitutes, or at any

contemplating suicide. Other as they say, they are “just like

notice, continues. This

is

sorts

white

a real

of Negroes do not interest folks.”

But

their interest in

and tremendous handicap.

the handicap of all writers on unpopular themes; but

Negroes because

its

bar

is

foot long,” that

From The

Crisis,

it

It

It is

519

analogous

to

young premium on

been done.

War make

a matter of congratulation. Similar notable

October 1927.

them because, white folks, we

puts a

realize all that has

books written by Negroes since the Civil is

despair and

bears hardest on

broader and more inclusive.

one kind of sadistic subject. Despite this, Mr. Mencken does not really first rate

rate, in

If

the

“a shelf a

works by white

The

Americans would be

Politics

a

and Propaganda of Arts and

good deal

less

Letters

than nine feet long. In music, Nathaniel

Dett has given the Negro spiritual another form and Harry Burleigh has done

more than reproduce it. W.C. Handy is father of the “Blues.'' ColeridgeTaylor, if we may be permitted a journey overseas, stands manifestly the great creative artist with his “Bamboula" and “Take Nabaridji"; and there is Roland Hayes — is he not an artist? There may, of course, be difference of opinion about Negro poets, but in our opinion Paul Laurence Dunbar, Claude McKay, Countee Cullen and Langston Hughes stand far above “second rate."

We are

inclined too to think that Chesnutt's novels are far above “the level of

white hacks.” Jean Toomer's work will not soon be forgotten and Booker T.

Washington's “Up

From

Slavery”

is

no ordinary biography.

Jessie Fauset

Walrond deserve notice. Finally, we have H.O. Tanner. On the whole then, despite a stimulating critic's opinion, we Negroes

and

Eric

quite well satisfied with our Renaissance.

520

And we have

not yet finished.

are

Passing by Nella Larsen

Nella Larsen

s

Passing

is

one of the

finest novels of the year. If

it

did not treat a

— the inter-marriage of a stodgy middle-elass white man to a would have an exeellent ehanee to be very' beautiful and selfish oetoroon — forbidden subjeet

it

and reeommended. As

hailed, seleeted

it

is,

will

it

probably be given the

eommendation of word of mouth. But what of that? It is a good elose-knit story, moving along surely but with enough leisure to set out seven delieately limned eharaeters. Above all, the thing is done with “silenee,” with only the

studied and singularly sueeessful

acquiring

style,

and she

Three colored

is

art.

doing

novelists

have

it

Nella Larsen

is

learning

how to write and

very simply and clearly.

lately essayed this intriguing

and

ticklish

subject of a person’s right to conceal the fact that he had a grandparent of

Negro descent.

It

is

all

a petty, silly matter of

another generation will comprehend with great the minds of most white Americans,

One may

it is

no

real

importance which

difficulty.

But today, and

a matter of tremendous

in

moral import.

deceive as to killing, stealing and adultery, but you must

tell

your

friend that you’re “colored,” or suffer a very material hell fire in this world,

The reason of all this, is of course that so many white people America either know or fear that they have Negro blood. My friend, who is not in the next.

if

in in

Department of Massachusetts, found a lady’s ancestry the other day. Her colored grandfather was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and through him she might join the D. A. R. But she asked “confidentially,” could the Record

that matter of “his

Walter White girl

— er — color be left out?”

in Flight records the facts of

from the colored race

Plum Bun considers

to the

an excursion of a

Orleans

white race and back again. Jessie Fauset in

the spiritual experiences and rewards of such an excur-

sion, but the story of the excursion fades into

Book review from The

New

Crisis, july 1929.

521

unimportance beside

that

The

historical

and Propaganda of Arts and Letters

Politics

document of the

description of a colored Philadelphia family.

That

characterization ought to live in literature.

Nella Larsen attempts quite a different thing. She explains just what “passing”

enemy.

on friend and but she attacks the problem fearlessly and with problem is under what circumstances would a

the psychology of the thing; the reaction of

is:

a difficult task,

It is

consummate

The

art.

person take a step like

great

and how would they

this

feel

about

it

it?

And how would

their fellows feel?

So here

is

the story: Irene,

who is faintly colored,

goes to a hotel roof for rest and peace and

ashamed of

herself,

Moreover, she then that

is

is

their

and drinking

she

is

tea.

faint with

Thats

shopping. She

Far from being

all.

proud of her dark husband and lovely boys.

deceiving no one.

If

they wish to recognize her as Spanish,

good fortune or misfortune. She

tea.

is

Then suddenly

is

resting

and getting cool

she faces an entirely different kind of

problem. She sees Clare and Clare recognizes her and pounces on her. Clare is

brilliantly beautiful.

She

is

colored in a different way. She has been rather

and has married

brutally kicked into the white world, self-defense.

She has

Irene with fierce

joy.

a daughter,

Here

is

but she

the plot.

Its

is

a white

man, almost

in

lonesome and eyes her playmate

development

is

the reaction of the

race-conscious Puritan, Irene; the lonesome hedonist, Clare; and then the

formation of the rapidly developing triangle with the cynical keen rebel, Irene’s

husband.

If the

American Negro renaissance

gives us

many more books like this, with

and charm, we can soon with equanimity drop the word “Negro.” Meantime, your job is clear. Buy the book. its

sincerity,

its

simplicity

522

Black

No More: Being

an Aeeount

Wonderful

of the Strange and

Land of the Free, A.D. 1933-1940

Workings of Seienee

by George

James Weldon Johnson

Day

is

satire

a slim black

of the loftier

s

S.

Schuyler

Saint Peter Relates an Incident of the Resurrection

volume brought out

sort,

in the

portraying the

in beautiful format.

Unknown

It is

a serious

Soldier as a Negro.

It

has a

fine subtle beauty.

“J

gave one

last look over the jasper

waif

and tall — The unknown soldier, dust-stained and begrimed, Climbing his way to heaven, and singing as he climbed:

And

afar descried a figure dark

Deep Deep Persons

who

river,

River,

my home I

want

is

over Jordan,

to cross over into

camp-groundT

wish a few hilarious hours must hasten to buy and read

George Schuyler’s Black No More. The book is extremely significant in Negro American literature, and it will be — indeed it already has been — abundantly misunderstood. It is

a satire, a rollicking, keen,

good-natured criticism of the Negro prob-

same method by which Bernard Shaw has been enabled to criticize the social organization of the modern world. A writer of satire is always misunderstood by the simple. So much so, that

lem

in the

United

Book review from The

States, following the

Crisis,

March

1931.

523

The

The

periodicals, like

smallest doses. If

some

its

s

and Propaganda of Arts and Letters

Crisis, are

we should speak

ears

were

less

The

object of satire

fun;

and the

is

of

test

satire,

even

in the

of the long ears of a certain Mr. Smith, tell

measurement Mr.

us that by exact

than three inches in length. to point

its

out fault and

genuineness

American Negroes have written nists'

almost afraid of using

reader would write in and

literal

Smith

Politics

is

its

by the very exaggeration of

evil

honesty and clearness of object. small

satire before, usually in

colum-

skits in

paragraphs; but their insincerity lay in the fact that the satire was usually

pointed not to the

Negroes, against

but to only one class of persons, and that class were

evil

whom

these

young

writers

had conceived

born of rather cheap jealousy. But Mr. Schuyler's forward and universal.

It

it

passes over

hard and unflinchingly straight in the face.

as well as biting

and

it is

single to being paid for this by richer

No one all

At any

we

escapes Schuyler's pen, and all

read the book. You are

joyous laughter the adventures of

and — we say

it

leaders,

slaps the white

It is,

therefore, courageous

class of

is

a

people

man who is not

people with an eye

influential

people

with

are waiting to see his

the white libraries south of the

the colored collectors north of rate,

Negro

whom

he

book

ex-

criticize.

cluded, not simply by

but by

and more

frank, straight-

and

a bit of real literature because here

doing public criticism of a certain unpopular

does not dare to

is

carries not only scathing criticism of

but of the mass of Negroes, and then just as

satire

enmity

a bitter

all reserv'ations

it.

bound

Max

to

enjoy

it

and

to follow with

Disher and Bunny, Dr.

— Dr.

524

Mason-Dixon Line,

Agamemnon

Crookman

Shapespeare Beard.

X

Labor

in

Black and White

D

u Bois was among the

first

students of soeial

movements

to anticipate the

enormous significance of the Great Black Migration. Many who awakened more slowly to its implications warned of dire economic and civil rights consequences, and enjoined the migrants

to stay in the South.

Du

Bois

applauded the impact of outmigration on the economy of the white South,

and he was enthusiastic about the labor rearrangements it would force upon the North (“Brothers, Come North” [1920]). Although Du Bois was an early convert to socialism, “The Negro and Radical Thought” (1921) showed to

be strikingly undoctrinaire

economic

greater

at first

about any specific program

equity, surprisingly agnostic

(1929),

Du

producing

about the importance of the

Russian Revolution, and deeply skeptical of the labor in America. In

for

him

racial policies of

organized

“The American Federation of Labor and the Negro”

Bois returned to the charge of organized labor hypocrisy, warning

the leadership that the black worker would soon “break any strike

when he

can gain economic advantage,” and reminding the A.F. of L. of its perfunctory

made by the NAACP to promote The recurring theme in Du Bois s

response to the good faith recommendations trust

among

black workers in the unions.

writings about

all varieties

of socialism and trade unionism was that their

egalitarian doctrines proved woefully inadequate in the real world of racism.

Thus,

in his

bedrock

essay,

“Marxism and the Negro Problem” (1933), he

denied that black and white laborers shared a capitalists: “It

him

is

him

affiliation

with trade unions, expels

decent houses and neighborhoods.” In the

Du

in

white

white labor that deprives the Negro of his right to vote, denies

education, denies

Land,”

common enemy

lyrical

him from

1947 address “Behold the

Bois finally envisaged in the postwar South the beginnings of that

working-class solidarity across racial lines that had been too long deferred.

527

Come

Brothers,

The

migration of Negroes from South to North continues and ought to

continue.

and

North

The North

Omaha

is

no paradise — as East

prove; but the South

is

at best a

Louis, Washington, Chicago,

St.

system of caste and insult and

at

worst a Hell. With ghastly and persistent regularity, the lynching of Negroes in the South continues

and

riots

— every year, every month, every day; wholesale murders

have taken place

at Norfolk,

The

other places in a single year.

Longview, Arkansas, Knoxville, and 24

outbreaks in the North have been fiercer,

but they have quickly been curbed; no attempt has been

whole blame on Negroes; and the safer

and

better for

cities

where

riots

made

to saddle the

have taken place are today

Negroes than ever before.

on the other hand, the outbreaks occurring daily but reveal the seething cauldron beneath — the unbending determination of the whites to subject and rule the blacks, to yield no single inch of their determination to In the South,

keep Negroes

There

as

are, to

near slavery as possible.

be sure. Voices

in the

Consciences; souls that see the utter

program of race

futility

work and

relations in

South

travel

— wise

Voices and troubled

and impossibility of the southern

and human intercourse. But these

Brough of Arkansas. He was an original leader of the most promising recent group which sought Sense and Justice in the race problem — “The University Commission on Southern Race Questions.” He

voices are impotent. Behold,

said, as

chairman:

“As an American citizen the Negro

is

entitled to

life, libert)^

and the pursuit

of happiness, and the equal protection of our laws for the safeguarding of these inalienable rights.

.

.

.

None

but the most prejudiced Negro-hater,

who oftentimes goes to the extreme of denying that any black man can have a white soul,

would controvert the proposition

quasi-public utilities and courts of justice the

From The

Crisis,

January 1920.

529

that in the administration of

Negro

is

entitled to the fair

Labor

and equal protection of the plantation

is

in

Black and White

law.

.

.

.

The meanest Negro on

a southern

entitled to the -same consideration in the administration of

justice as the proudest scion of a cultured cavalier.”

Yet

when he

ran for Governor of Arkansas, he vehemently denied and

curred in Phillips County, he tion,

let

the slave

murder the innocent, and

imprisonment and death

Lowden

— and

when the “uprising” ocbarons make their own investiga-

explained away his liberal Negro sentiments

honest laborers

ignorant,

railroad

to

in droves; contrast this with the actions of Governor

Mayor Smith of Omaha! other hand, we win through the ballot.

of Illinois and

On the We can hold

As workers

in

can vote in the North.

Can we

hesitate?

COME NORTH!

Not

in a rush

wanderers, but after quiet investigation and careful location.

Negro labor

is

endless. Immigration

indefensible drive against

all

foreigners

is is

still

we

northern establishments,

good wages, decent treatment, healthful homes and schools

are getting

children.

office in the North.

We

our

for

— not as aimless The demand

for

cut off and a despicable and

shutting the gates of opportunity to

the outcasts and victims of Europe. Very good.

We will make America pay for

her Injustice to us and to the poor foreigner by pouring into the open doors of

mine and

factory in increasing

numbers.

Troubles will ensue with white unions and householders, but remember that the chief source of these troubles

Southerners

live in the

is

tried desperately to

a danger, but

who by open and

in these northern centers

make

Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Baltimore,

This

rooted in the South; a million

North. These are the ones

propaganda fomented trouble

They have

is

we have

and are

secret

still

at

it.

trouble in Indianapolis, Cleveland,

and

learned

New York how

to

City.

meet

it

by unwavering

self-

defense and by the ballot.

Negro and wants him can have him permanently, on these terms and no others: Meantime,

1

.

2

.

3

.

4

.

5

.

The The

if

the South really wants the

right to vote.

abolition of lynching.

Justice in the courts.

The

abolition of “Jim-Crow” cars.

A complete

system of education, free and compulsory.

530

at his best,

it

The Negro and Radical Thought

Mr. Claude McKay, one of the editors of T/zc Liberator and a Negro poet of distinction, writes us as follows: I

'd

am

The

surprised and sorry that in your editorial.

Crisis for

The

Drive’, published in

May, you should leap out of your sphere

to sneer at the

Russian Revolution, the greatest event in the history of humanity; greater than the French Revolution,

achievement

to

which

Negro children and students

is

much

held up as a wonderful

in white

and black schools.

For American Negroes the indisputable and outstanding fact of the Russian

mere handful of Jews, much less in ratio to the number of Negroes in the American population, have attained, through the Revolution, all the political and social rights that were denied to them under the revolution

is

that a

regime of the Czar. “Although no thinking Negro can deny the great work that the

N.A.A.C.R

is

doing,

it

must

yet be admitted that

from

its

platform and

personnel the Association cannot function as a revolutionary working class organization.

And

the overwhelming majority of American Negroes belong

by birth, condition and repression the

American Negro the

to the

political

and

working

chy with the active co-operation of the deserves the support of

“But the Negro

all

interests.

is

him by

is

to get for

by virtue of

the Southern oligar-

governments and the

state

And your aim

is

a

tacit

noble one, which

progressive Negroes.

in politics

and

social life

is

ostracized only technically by

the distinction of color; in reality the Negro

cause he

Your aim

social rights that are his

the Constitution, the rights which are denied

support of northern business

class.

of the lov/est type of worker.

.

.

is

discriminated against be-

.

“Obviously, this economic difference between the white and black

workers manifests From The

itself in

various forms, in color prejudice, race hatred.

Crisis, July 1921.

531

Labor

and

political

Black and Wliite

in

social boycotting

and lynching of Negroes. And

— law courts, churches, schools, the

trenched institutions of white America

and the Press — condone these

fighting forces

the en-

all

iniquities perpetrated

upon

black men; iniquities that are dismissed indifferently as the inevitable result of the social system.

Still,

whenever

it

suits the business interests controlling

these institutions to mitigate the persecutions against Negroes, they do so

When

with impunity.

who

organized white workers quit their jobs, Negroes,

are discouraged by the whites to organize, are sought to take their

places.

And

military

work under the protection of the

these strike-breaking Negroes

and the

police.

But

as ordinary citizens

and workers, Negroes are

not protected by the military and the police from the mob.

Negroes those

classes will not grant

plausibly, are withheld rights

rights

from the white

would immediately cause

which, on a

The

and more

lesser scale

The concession

proletariat.

a Revolution in the

economic

ruling

of these

life

of this

country.”

We Crisis

are aware that

some of our

during and since the war.

friends have

been disappointed with The

Some have assumed

we aimed

that

chiefly at

mounting the band wagon with our cause during the madness of war; others thought that we were playing safe so as to avoid the Department of Justice; and still

a third class

found us curiously stupid

matters of human reform.

in

our attitude toward the broader

McKay

among them, must give us credit for standing to our guns in the past at no little cost in many influential quarters, and they must also remember that we have one chief cause

— the

subordinated

Such

critics,

and Mr.

emancipation of the Negro, and

to

is

this

all

else

must be

— not because other questions are not important but because to

our mind the most important social question today

is

recognition of the darker

races.

Turning now

phenomena known as the Russian Revolution, Mr. McKay is wrong in thinking that we have ever intentionally sneered at it. On the contrary, time may prove, as he believes, that the to that

Russian Revolution centuries,

and

set of

the greatest event of the nineteenth and twentieth

same time The incredibly vast, and the

leaders the most unselfish prophets. At the

its

Crisis does not

is

marvelous

know

happenings there

this

to

be

in the last five years

must make any student pause. listening ears, seeing

Russia

true.

We

some splendid

is

have been intricate

sit,

to a

therefore, with waiting

results

from Russia,

degree that

hands and

like the cartoons for

public education recently exhibited in America, and hearing of other things

which

We

frighten us.

are

moved

reports in the

neither by the superficial omniscience of Wells nor the

New York Times; but this alone we do know:

532

that the

immediate

The Negro and Radical Thought

work

American Negro

for the

America and not

lies in

in Russia,

and

this, too,

in spite of the fact that the

Third Internationale has made a pronouncement which cannot but have our entire sympathy:

The Communist

Internationale once [and] forever breaks with the tradi-

Second Internationale which

tions of the

The Communist

white race.

Internationale makes

The

the workers of the entire world.

men

fraternally unite

only recognized the

in reality

ranks of the

it its

task to

emancipate

Communist Internationale

of all colors: white, yellow and black

— the toilers of

^

the entire world.

Despite

this there

come

to us black

men

two insistent questions:

The

today the right program of socialism?

editor of

The

What

is

Crisis considers

himself a Socialist but he does not believe that

German State Socialism or the panaceas. He believes with most

dictatorship of the proletariat are perfect

men

thinking

ing wealth

is

method of creating,

that the present

desperately wrong; that there must

control of wealth; but he does not take,

and he

that,

and more fundamental

is

know

just

controlling and distribut-

come and

what form

is

coming

that control

is

a social

going to

not prepared to dogmatize with Marx or Lenin. Further than

How

duty and outlook of The Crisis,

to the

is

this

can the colored people of the world, and particularly the Negroes of the United States, trust the working classes?

question:

far

Many honest thinking Negroes assume, and we have only

these, that

working

class

embrace

Socialism or even

Labor and

true,

but

it is

embrace the working

ours; that

Communism,

Socialists

mankind and

to

Mr.

we have only

McKay seems to be one of class

to join

as they are today

program

have the

Trade Unionism and

expounded,

and Comrnunists believe and

to

act

to

have Union

on the equality of

the abolition of the color line. The Crisis wishes that this were

forced to the conclusion that

The American

it is

not.

Federation of Labor, as representing the trade unions in

America, has been grossly unfair and discriminatory toward Negroes and is.

American Socialism has discriminated

was prepared

to

go further with

openly discriminated against

assume on the

this

and before the war discrimination. European Socialism has

Asiatics.

part of unlettered

clearness of thought, a sense of

still

against black folk

Nor

is

this surprising.

Why should we

and suppressed masses of white workers,

human

brotherhood, that

is

a

sadly lacking in

the most educated classes?

Our

task, therefore, as

it

seems

to

The

Crisis,

the working classes of the world that black are

human

suffer.

We

is

clear:

We

have

to

convince

men, brown men and yellow men

beings and suffer the same discrimination that white workers

have

in addition to this to

espouse the cause of the white workers.

533

Labor

only being careful that cause.

We

we do

in Black

not in

and White

this

must, for instance, have bread.

out of decent jobs,

we

compelled

are

way allow them If

to jeopardize

our

our white fellow workers drive us

accept indecent wages even at the

to

whose is the blame? Finally despite public prejudice and clamour, we should examine with open mind in literaprice oL'scabbing.”

ture,

It is

debate and in real

a hard choice, but

life

the great programs of social reform that are day by

day being put forward. This was the true thought and meaning back of our

an immediate program the N.A.A.C.P. in Africa or

understand.

It is

for

Negro emancipation

foolish for us to give

by seeking

up

laid

to join a revolution

even seem

to sneer at the

hundreds of millions of our whiter

human

534

down and thought out by

this practical

program

which we do not

On the other hand, as Mr. McKay says,

for us to sneer or

May editorial. We have

it

would be

for

mirage

at

present

just as foolish

blood-enh\aned writhing of

brothers.

The American Federation

of

Labor and the Negro

The speech

of). P. Frey at the National Interracial

on Attempts

to

Conference

Organize Negro Workers” has given

Walter White in the Nation characterizes

this

rise to

speech

last

some

December

controversy.

as “the nadir in casuistic

defense of exclusion of Negroes from labor unions.”

To this characterization Frey objects, but admits, “I failed to accomplish one purpose I had in mind — the presentation of a careful program.” But

this

Negroes

was not the

suffer

real

from injustice

essence of Freys failure. His whole thesis was: in the labor

union world, but they do not

suffer

much more than Jews, Poles and even Americans. Moreover, they are partially blame because they do not advise even where they can. to

This

latter

their workers to enter the trade unions

He cited Booker T.

point Frey sought to emphasize in every way.

Washington, and resolution of the

his advice to the iron workers of Newport

Negro

Press Association;

News; he

and he even went so

cited the far as to

declare: “I

have asked representatives of the Negro race, some of the best known,

make some

public statement or write

me

a letter in

which they would

was their belief that wherever possible members of their race should trade union of their craft, so that in the efforts letter

I

have

made

I

could use that statement or

to organize

Negroes. So

far

letter to

say

to it

join the

help

me

no such statement

or

has been received.”

This whole thesis

is

untrue and unfair.

Federation of Labor toward the Negro

is

The

record of the American

indefensible.

An

early declaration of

the A. F. of L. said:

“The working people must unite and organize, From The

Crisis, July 1929.

535

irrespective of creed, color.

Labor

in

Black and White

” sex, nationality or politics

With some objection, this declaration was reaffirmed in 1897, but it was not embodied in the Constitution. Nevertheless, bodies confining membership to whites were barred from affiliation with the A. F. of L. Later, in 1902, the legality of excluding Negroes from local unions,

and from

bodies was recognized by a resolution which

city central labor

permitted separate charters to colored unions. Later, without

official

an-

nouncement, national unions, like the Railway Trainmen, and the Railway Telegraphers, which specifically exclude Negroes, were allowed to join the A. F. of L.;

and

finally,

the Stationary Engineers, already a

A. F. of L. were allowed to change their charter

and

member

of the

specifically exclude

black men. In addition to this,

well-known that even

it is

in the case of organizations

which do not openly and by name exclude persons of Negro descent, the local unions repeatedly do this as a matter of regular policy without rebuke from the A. F. of L.

The

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has long

recognized the danger of held in Philadelphia, in the A.

F.

“For

and

this situation

at

its

15th

Annual Conference

1924, the following Resolution was addressed to

July,

of L.:

many

years the

American Negro has been demanding admittance

to

the ranks of union labor.

“For

many

interest in

years your organizations have

Negro

of the black

is

it

public profession of your

unionized, and of your hatred

'scab.'

“Notwithstanding

main

have

labor, of your desire to

made

this

apparent surface agreement, Negro labor in the

outside the ranks of organized labor, and the reason

is first,

that white

union labor does not want black labor, and secondly, black labor has ceased

beg admittance

to

union ranks because of

its

to

increasing value and efficiency

outside the unions.

“We

thus face a

crisis in interracial

labor conditions: the continued and

determined race prejudice of white labor, together with the limitation of immigration,

is

giving black labor tremendous advantage.

entering the ranks of semiskilled and skilled labor and he

is

The Negro

is

entering mainly as

He broke the great steel strike. He will soon be in a position to break any strike when he can gain economic advantage for himself. “On the other hand, intelligent Negroes know full well that a blow at a ‘scab.’

organized labor

is

a

blow at all

labor; that black labor today profits

and sweat of labor leaders

in the past

who have

monopoly by organization.

there

up

If

non-union laborers who have

is

built

in

by the blood

fought oppression and

America

a great black bloc of

a right to hate unions, all laborers,

white, eventually must suffer.

536

black and

The American Federation of Labor and

the

Negro

not time, then, that black and white labor get together? Is it not time for white unions to stop bluffing and for black laborers to stop cutting off their Is it

noses to spite their faces?

We, therefore, propose that there be formed by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the American Federation of Labor, the Railway Brotherhoods and any other bodies agreed upon, an Interracial Labor Commission.

“We propose 1.

To

Commission undertake:

and practice of national labor bodies unions toward Negroes and of Negro labor toward unions.

find out the exact attitude

and 2.

that this

local

To organize

systematic propaganda against racial discrimination on

the basis of these facts at the labor meetings, in local assemblies and in local unions.

“The National Association ready to take part in such a all

organized labor.

borers that unless

The

for the

Advancement of Colored People

movement and hereby

stands

invites the cooperation of

Association hereby solemnly warns American

some such

gained by organized labor in

step as this this

is

country

la-

taken and taken soon the position

is

threatened with irreparable

loss.”

Besides perfunctory acknowledgment of receipt, no action has ever been

taken on this resolution by the American Federation of Labor. This sufficient

answer

to Frey’s

awkward and insincere defense of the color

the A. F. of L.

537

is

a

line in

Marxism and the Negro Problem

Jew born at Treves, Germany, in March, 1818. He came of an educated family and studied at the Universities of Bonn and Berlin, planning first to become a lawyer, and then to teach philosophy. But his ideas were too radical for the government. He turned to journalism, and Karl

Marx was

a

having lived in

economic reform, dying Germany, Belgium, France, and,

of his

England.

finally

gave his

life,

in

life

to

He

published

in

in

London

in 1883, after

for the last thirty-five years

1867, the

first

volume of

his

monumental work. Capital There are certain books

in the

world which every searcher for truth must

know; the Bible, Critique of Pure Reason, Origin of Species, and Karl Marx’s Capital Yet until the Russian Revolution, Karl

He was

Marx was

treated condescendingly in the universities,

little

known

in

America.

and regarded even by the

whose curious and inconvenient theories it was easy to refute. Today, at last, we all know better, and we see in Karl Marx a colossal genius of infinite sacrifice and monumental industry, and with a mind of extraordinary logical keenness and grasp. We may disagree with many of the great books of truth that I have named, and with Capital, but they intelligent public as a radical agitator

can never be ignored. At a recent dinner to Einstein, another great Jew, the story was told of a professor

who was criticized as having ‘To sense of humor” because he tried to

Theory of Relativity in a few simple words. Something of the same criticism must be attached to anyone who attempts similarly to indicate the relation of Marxian philosophy and the American Negro problem. And yet,

explain the

with

all

am essaying the task knowing that it will be but tentative much criticism, both on my own part and that of other abler

modesty,

and subject

to

1

students.

From The

Crisis,

May

1933.

538

Marxism and

The

task

which Karl Marx

organization of industry in

Negro Problem

himself was to study and interpret the

set

modern

the

Communist Manifesto,

works, The

the

One

world.

of

Marxs

earlier

on the eve of the series down this fundamental propo-

issued in 1848,

of democratic revolutions in Europe, laid sition.

That tion

epoch the prevailing mode of economic produc-

in every historical

and exchange, and the

form the

social organization necessarily following

upon which

basis

and from which alone can be

built up,

is

from

it,

ex-

plained, the political and intellectual history of that epoch; that consequently

the whole history of mankind

.

.

.

has been a history of class struggles, contest

between exploiting and exploited, ruling and oppressed

classes; that the

history of these class struggles forms a series of evolution in which, now-a-days,

been reached where the exploited and oppressed class (the cannot attain its emancipation from the sway of the exploiting and

a stage has proletariat)

ruling class (the bourgeoisie) without, at the

same

emancipating society

exploitation,

and

distinction

large

at

from

all

time, and once

and

for all,

oppression,

class-

class-struggles.”

which have been used so much they have almost lost their meaning. But behind

All will notice in this manifesto, phrases lately

and so

carelessly that

them

still

living

exploited

is is

and

a reality.

The

wages with which

to

than his

work.

ability to

The

insistent truth.

buy

capitalist

labor.

The

A wage

the resultant manufactured

still

class struggle of exploiter

and

today owns machines, materials, and

laborer even in America

contract takes

commodity

owns little more place between these two and

or service

is

the property of the

capitalist.

Here Marx begins

his scientific analysis based

on

a mastery of practically

all

economic theory before his time and on an extraordinary, thoroughgoing personal knowledge of industrial conditions over all Europe and many other parts of the world.

His final conclusions were never

volume of

finish the first

completed from

his papers

all

properly published.

He

lived only to

his Capital,

and the other two volumes were

and notes by

his friend Engels.

The

result

is

an

unfinished work, extraordinarily difficult to read and understand and one

which the master himself would have been first representing his mature and finished thought. Nevertheless, that

the others, lay

down

first

volume, together with the

a logical line of thought.

that the value of products regularly

upon

to criticize as

exchanged

The

fairly gist

in the

not properly

evident meaning of

of that philosophy

is

open market depends

the labor necessary to produce them; that capital consists of machines,

materials and wages paid for labor; that out of the finished product, materials have been paid for

and the wear and

539

tear

when

and machinery replaced.

Labor

in

Black and White

and wages paid, there remains a surplus value. This surplus value arises from labor and is the difference between what is actually paid laborers for their wages and the market value of the commodities which the laborers produce. It represents, therefore, exploitation of the laborer, and this exploitation, inherent in the capitalistic system of production,

is

the cause of poverty, of indus-

and eventually of social revolution. This social revolution, whether we regard it as voluntary revolt or the inevitable working of a vast cosmic law of social evolution, will be the last manifestation of the class struggle, and will come by inevitable change

trial crises,

induced by the very nature of the conditions under which present production is

carried on.

It

will

come by

compose the wage-earning ship of

all

proletariat,

and

it

will result in

services of industry according to

to the will of the

and not according

and

disappearance of capitalistic exploitation, and the

capital, the

division of the products

men who common owner-

the action of the great majority of

owners of

human

needs,

capital.

goes without saying that every step of this reasoning and every presentation of supporting facts have been bitterly assailed. The labor theory of value has been denied; the theory of surplus value refuted; and inevitability of It

revolution scoffed

at;

while industrial crises

have been defended

as

— at least until this present one —

unusual exceptions proving the rule of modern

industrial efficiency.

But with the Russian experiment and the World Depression most thoughtful

men

today are beginning to admit:

That the continued recurrence of on economic

rivalry,

industrial crises

and wars based

largely

with persistent poverty, unemployment, disease and

crime, are forcing the world to contemplate the possibilities of fundamental

change

in

our economic methods; and that means thorough-going change,

be violent,

whether

it

possible,

and

in

as in

France or Russia, or peaceful,

just as true to the

Marxian formula,

any case. Revolution seems bound Perhaps nothing

States:

to

if it is

as

seems

just as

fundamental change;

come.

illustrates this better

than recent actions in the United

our re-examination of the whole concept of Property; our banking

moratorium; the extraordinary new agriculture

bill;

the plans to attack

ployment, and similar measures. Labor rather than gambling foundation of value and whatever

acumen — there

we

call

it

— exploitation,

is

unem-

the sure

theft or business

something radically wrong with an industrial system that turns out simultaneously paupers and millionaires and sets a world starving because

it

is

has too

much

food.

What now has all this to do with the Negro problem? First of all, it is manifest that the

mass of Negroes

in the

United States belong

540

distinctly to the

working

Marxism and the Negro Problem

Of every thousand working Negroes

proletariat.

belong

any

less

than a hundred and

fifty

could possibly be considered bourgeois. And even this more educated and prosperous class has but small connections with the exto

class that

ploiters of wage

and labor. Nevertheless, this black proletariat is not a part of the white proletariat. Black and white work together in many cases, and influence each other s rates of wages. They have similar complaints against capitalists, save that the grievances of the

Negro worker are more fundamental and inde-

fensible, ranging as they do, since the

day of Karl Marx, from chattel slavery, the worst paid, sweated, mobbed and cheated labor in any civilized land.

And

to

while Negro labor in America suffers because of the fundamental

inequities of the

whole

capitalistic system, the lowest

and most

fatal

degree of

comes not from the capitalists but from fellow white laborers. It is white labor that deprives the Negro of his right to vote, denies him education, denies him affiliation with trade unions, expels him from decent houses and neighborhoods, and heaps upon him the public insults of open color discrimiits

suffering

nation.

no

It is

uses

it

for

sufficient its

own

answer

to say that capital

ends. This

encourages

may have excused

this

oppression and

the ignorant and superstitious

Russian peasants in the past and some of the poor whites of the South today.

But the bulk of American white labor is neither ignorant nor fanatical. It knows exactly what it is doing and it means to do it. William Green and Mathew Woll of the A.F. of L. have no excuse of illiteracy or religion to veil their deliberate intention to

of

common

keep Negroes and Mexicans and other elements

labor, in a lower proletariat as subservient to their interests as

theirs are to the interests of capital.

This large development of a petty bourgeoisie within the American laboring class

is

a post-Marxian

phenomenon and

the result of the tremendous and

world-wide development of capitalism in the 20th Century. capitalistic

dustrial

production of goods and services which out-run even class of technical engineers

The

real

of

production has gained an effective world-wide organization. In-

technique and mass production have brought

aristocracy

The market

proletariat

owners of capital are small

families buying

in savings

wide market.

and managers has arisen forming

between the older

have deposits

this

possibilities in the

a

A new

working

class

and the absentee owners of capital.

as well as large investors

— workers who

banks and small holdings in stocks and bonds;

homes and purchasing commodities on

installment; as well as

the large and rich investors.

Of

course, the individual laborer gets but an infinitesimal part of his

income from such investments.

On

the other hand, such investments, in the

aggregate, largely increase available capital for the exploiters, and they give

541

Labor

in

Black and White

Between workers and owners of and financiers who distribute capital and

investing laborers the capitalistic ideology. capital stand today the bank-ers direct the engineers.

Thus

the engineers and the saving better-paid workers, form a

bourgeois

class,

whose

interests are

bound up with

On

antagonistic to those of common labor.

new

petty

those of the capitalists and

the other hand,

common

labor in

America and white Europe far from being motivated by any vision of revolt against capitalism, has been blinded by the American vision of the possibility of layer after layer of the workers escaping into the wealthy class and becoming managers and employers of labor.

Thus

in

America we have seen

a wild

and

ruthless scramble of labor groups

over each other in order to climb to wealth on the backs of black labor and foreign immigrants.

The

Irish

climbed on the Negroes. The Germans scram-

bled over the Negroes and emulated the

forward next to the leaving Negroes

Germans and

still

at the

Irish.

The Scandinavians

fought

the Italians and “Bohunks” are crowding up,

bottom chained

to helplessness, first

by

slavery,

then by disfranchisement and always by the Golor Bar.

The second been the

influence on white labor both in America and Europe has

fact that the extension of the

world market by imperial expanding

industry has established a world-wide toiling

slaves

new

proletariat of colored workers,

under the worst conditions of 19th Gentury capitalism, herded as and serfs and furnishing by the lowest paid wage in modern history a

mass of raw material

for industry.

With

this largess the capitalists

have consoli-

dated their economic power, nullified universal suffrage and bribed the white

workers by high wages, visions of wealth and the opportunity to drive “niggers.” Soldiers

and

sailors

from the white workers are used

to

keep “darkies”

in

and white foremen and engineers have been established as irresponsible satraps in Ghina and India, Africa and the West Indies, backed

their “places”

by the organized and centralized ownership of machines, raw materials, finished

commodities and land monopoly over the whole world.

How now Eirst of all

does the philosophy of Karl Marx apply today to colored labor?

colored labor has no

technocrats would do status of whites.

was this

to

make

No

common ground with white labor. No soviet of

more than

exploit colored labor in order to raise the

revolt of a white proletariat

could be started

black workers their economic, political and social equals.

reason that American socialism for

fifty

years has

Negro problem, and the communists cannot even get America unless they begin by expelling Negroes.

On

the other hand, within the

Africa, in

if its

South America and

in

been

object It is

dumb on

for

the

a respectful hearing in

Negro groups, in the United States, in West the West Indies, petty bourgeois groups are

being evolved. In South America and the West Indies such groups drain off

542

Marxism

Negro Problem

arid the

and intelligence into the white group, and leave the black labor poor, ignorant and leaderless save for an occasional demagog.

skill

West Africa,

Negro bourgeoisie is developing with invested capital and employment of natives and is only kept from the conventional capitalistic development by the opposition and enmity of white capital, and the white managers and engineers who represent it locally and who display bitter In

a

prejudice and tyranny; and by white European labor whicli furnishes armies and navies and Empire “preference.” Mrican black labor and black capital are therefore driven to seek alliance and common ground. In the United States also a petty bourgeoisie

is

being developed, consisting

of clergymen, teachers, farm owners, professional

men. The position of this even large investors

class,

however,

is

men and

peculiar: they are not the chief or

Negro labor and therefore

in

retail business-

exploit

it

only here and

and they bear the brunt of color prejudice because they express in word and work the aspirations of all black folk for emancipation. The revolt of any there;

black proletariat could not, therefore, be logically directed against this

nor could

this class join either

class,

white capital, white engineers or white workers

to strengthen the color bar.

Under and of its

these circumstances, what shall

American Negro?

relation to the

we

say of the

We can

only

Marxian philosophy

say, as

it

seems

to

me,

Marxian philosophy is a true diagnosis of the situation in Europe in the middle of the 1 9th Century despite some of its logical difficulties. But it that the

must be modified

Negro group

is

United States of America and especially so far as the concerned. The Negro is exploited to a degree that means in the

and indigence. And class but from the white

poverty, crime, delinquency

that exploitation

from a black

capitalists

capitalistic

the white proletariat. His only defense protect

him from both

parties,

is

and such

prevent inside the race group any large

comes not

and equally from

such internal organization

as will

economic insight as will development of capitalistic exploitapractical

tion.

Meantime, comes the Great Depression. phe.

The

fantastic industrial structure of

It

levels all in

America

is

The

trade unions of skilled labor are double-tongued

and

common

united action.

white labor It

is

mighty catastro-

threatened with ruin.

and

helpless. Unskilled

Negro competition to attempt The reformist program of Socialism meets

too frightened at

only begs a dole.

no response from the white proletariat because it offers no escape to wealth and no effective bar to black labor, and a mud-sill of black labor is essential to

white labors standard of

even listened

to,

living.

shrill

because and solely because

between black and white. There a

The

Marxian revolution based on

is

not

at

cry of a few it

communists

seeks to break

down

not

barriers

present the slightest indication that

a united class-conscious proletariat

543

is

is

any-

Labor

where on the American group

rivalry are

still

far

which may

in

Black and White

horizon. Rather race antagonism and labor

undisturbed by world catastrophe. In the hearts of

black laborers alone, therefore, industry

in

lie

those ideals of democracy in politics and

time make the workers of the world effective dictators

of civilization.

544 r

Behold the Land

The

American Negroes is in the South. Here three hundred and years ago, they began to enter what is now the United States of

future of

tw^enty-seven

America; here they have made their greatest contribution to American culture; and here they have suffered the damnation of slavery, the frustration of reconstruction and the lynching of emancipation. zation like yours

crusade. Here

is

is

I

trust

then that an organi-

going to regard the South as the battle-ground of a great

the magnificent climate; here

the beauty of the Southern sun; and here

if

is

the fruitful earth under

anywhere on

the thinker, the worker and the dreamer. This

is

earth,

is

the need of

the firing line not simply for

the emancipation of the

American Negro but for the emancipation of the African Negro and the Negroes of the West Indies; for the emancipation of the colored races; and for the emancipation of the white slaves of modern capitalistic

monopoly.

ALLIES

IN

THE WHITE SOUTH

Remember here, too, that you do not stand alone. It may seem like a failing fight when the newspapers ignore you; when every effort is made by white people in the South to count you out of citizenship and to act as though you did not exist as

human

labor; gleaning wealth

beings while

from your

all

the time they are profiting by your

sacrifices

and

trying to build a nation

and

a

upon your degradation. You must remember that despite all this, you have allies and allies even in the white South. First and greatest of these civilization

possible allies are the white working classes about you. 7’he poor whites

you have been taught to despise and who From a fifteen-page pamphlet published by Alabama (1947).

in turn

the Southern

545

have learned

to fear

whom

and hate

Negro Youth Congress, Birmingham,

Labor

in

Black and White

you. This must not deter you from efforts to in the past in their

ignorance and suffering they have been led foolishly to look

cause of most of their

upon you

as the

attitude

hereditary from slavery and that

is

make them understand, because

distress. it

You must remember

that this

has been deliberately cultivated

ever since emancipation.

Slowly but surely the working people of the South, white and black, must

remember that their emancipation depends upon their mutual cooperation; upon their acquaintanceship with each other; upon their friendship; upon their social intermingling. Unless this happens each is going to be made the football to break the heads and hearts of the other.

come

to

WHITE YOUTH

IS

FRUSTRATED

White youth in the South is peculiarly frustrated. There is not a single great ideal which they can express or aspire to that does not bring them into flat contradiction with the Negro problem. The more they try to escape it, the more they land into hypocrisy, lying and double-dealing; the more they become, what they least wish to become, the oppressors and despisers of human beings. Some of them, in larger and larger numbers, are bound to turn toward the truth and to recognize you as brothers and travellers

sisters,

as fellow

toward the dawn.

“JAMES BYRNES, THE FAVORITE SON OF THIS

COMMONWEALTH" There has always been

They have up for what they know

problem stand

in the

clearly.

the long run to follow their

South that intellectual

always lacked and is

right.

own

some

elite still

who saw

the

Negro

lack the courage to

Nevertheless they can be depended on in

clear thinking

and

their

own decent

choice.

Finally even the politicians must eventually recognize the trend in the world,

and

James Byrnes, that favorite son of this commonwealth, and Secretary of State of the United States, is today occupyin this country,

in the South.

ing an indefensible and impossible position; and

of men, he must begin to help establish in his

if

he survives

in the

memory

own South Carolina something

of that democracy which he has been recently so loudly preaching to Russia.

He

is

the end of a long series of men whose eternal damnation

they looked truth in the face and did not see

546

it;

is

the fact that

John C. Calhoun,

Wade

Behold the Land

Hampton, Ben Tillman

men whose names must

are

ever be besmirched by

the fact that they fought against freedom and democracy in a land which was

founded upon Democracy and Freedom. Eventually this class of men must yield to the writing in the hypocrite, Jan Smuts,

who

today

Byrnes for a United Nations,

is

is

same

That great

humanity and standing beside

talking of

at the

stars.

time, oppressing the black people

of Africa to an extent which makes their two countries. South Africa and the

Southern South, the most reactionary peoples on earth. Peoples whose exploitation of the poor and helpless reaches the last degree of shame. They must in the long run yield to the forward march of civilization or die.

WHAT DOES THE FIGHT MEAN If

now you young people

instead of running

away from the

battle here in

Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi, instead of seeking

freedom and opportunity opportunity

if

if it

York

you do

this,

you must

How can

and methods? And where does should be the

and the

takes every day of your lives

does the fight mean?

I

New

Chicago and

— which

do

spell

— nevertheless grit your teeth and make up your minds to fight

out right here children;

in

it

as

meetings

of your children’s

lives

it

what

like this ask yourselves

be carried on? Wliat are the best

tools,

arms,

lead?

last to insist that

and death. There are times,

in

it

the uplift of mankind never calls for force

both you and

know, when

I

Tho’ love repine and reason chafe.

There came ’Tis

a voice without reply,

man’s perdition

When

for the truth

to

be

safe

he ought

At the same time and even more clearly

in a

to die.

day

like this, after the millions

of mass murders that have been done in the world since 1914, the

last to

fact that

believe that force

what

is

facts of science

ever the final word.

going to win in

reasonable world. .

is

is

The

this

world

is

the one salvation of man.

We cannot escape the clear

reason

careful reasoning of the

The

we ought to be

if this

ever

becomes

human mind backed world,

if it

resumes

a

by the

march

its

toward civilization, cannot ignore reason. This has been the tragedy of the

South

in the past;

against reason

it is still its

awful and unforgivable sin that

and against the

fact. It tried to

it

547

its

face

upon freedom; it build mob violence on law

build slavery

upon democracy; it tried to and law on lynching and in all that despicable endeavor, the tried to build tyranny

has set

state of

South

Labor

in

Black and White

began not the Civil War — not the War betw'een the States — but the War to Preserve Slavery; it began mob violenee and lynehing and today it stands in the front rank of those defying the Carolina has led the South for a eentury.

It

Supreme Court on disfranchisement. Nevertheless reason can and will prevail; but of course with publicity

it

can only prevail

— pitiless, blatant publicity. You have got to make the people of know what

the United States and of the world

is

going on in the South. You

to use every field of publicity to force the truth into their ears,

have got

and

You have got to make it impossible for any human being to live in the South and not realize the barbarities that prevail here. You may be condemned for flamboyant methods; for calling a congress like this; for waving your grievances under the noses and in the faces of men. That makes before their eyes.

no

difference;

it is

your duty

to

do

it.

It is

your duty

to

do more of this

sort of

thing than you have done in the past. As a result of this you are going to be called

upon

black

woman

marry and caste

no easy thing for a young black man or a young live in the South today and to plan to continue to live here; to children; to establish a home. They are in the midst of legal

for sacrifice.

to

raise

and customary

It is

insults;

they are in continuous danger of

mob

violence;

they are mistreated by the officers of the law and they have no hearing before the courts and the churches attention

which they ought

to

and public opinion commensurate with the receive. But that sacrifice is only the Beginning

of Battle, you must re-build this South.

enormous opportunities here for a new nation, a new Economy, a new culture in a South really new and not a mere renewal of an old South of slavery, monopoly and race hate. There is a chance for a new cooperative There

are

on renewed land owned by the State with capital furnished by the mechanized and coordinated with city life. There is chance for strong,

agriculture State,

Trade Unions without race discrimination, with high wage, closed shop and decent conditions of work, to beat back and hold in check the swarm of landlords, monopolists and profiteers who are today sucking the blood out of

virile

this land.

There

of T.V.A. and

is

its

chance

for cooperative industry, built

future extensions.

mechanize domestic

There

on the cheap power

opportunity to organize and

is

service with decent hours,

and high wage and dignified

training.

“BEHOLD THE LAND” Hiere

is

a vast field for

consumers’ cooperation, building business on public

There is of mobs and

service

and not on

private profit as the main-spring of industry.

chance

for a broad,

sunny, healthy

home

548

life,

shorn of the fear

Behold the Land

liquor,

and rescued from

lying, stealing politicians,

who build their deviltry on

race prejudice.

Here

in this

South

is

the gateway to the colored millions of the West Indies,

Central and South America. Here

the straight path to Africa, the Indies,

is

China and the South Seas. Here is the Path to the Creater, Freer truer World. It would be shame and cowardice to surrender this glorious land and its opportunities for civilization and humanity to the thugs and lynchers, the mobs and profiteers, the monopolists and gamblers who today choke its soul

and

The

and sulphur; the coal and iron; the cotton and corn; the lumber and cattle belong to you the workers, black and white, and not to the thieves who hold them and use them to enslave you. They can be rescued and restored to the people if you have the guts to strive for the real steal

its

resources.

oil

right to vote, the right to real education, the right to happiness

and health and

the total abolition of the father of these scourges of mankind, poverty.

THE GREAT SACRIEICE “Behold the beautiful land which the Lord thy

Cod

hath given thee.” Behold

the land, the rich and resourceful land, from which for a hundred years

elements have been running away,

its

its

best

youth and hope, black and white,

scurrying North because they are afraid of each other, and dare not face a future of equal, independent, upstanding

sham democracy. To rescue this

human

beings, in a real

and not

land, in this way, calls for the Great Sacrifice; This

is

a

the

upon to do because it is the right thing to do. Because embarked upon a great and holy crusade, the emancipation of

thing that you are called

you are

mankind black and

white; the upbuilding of democracy; the breaking down,

particularly here in the South, of forces of evil represented by race prejudice in

South Carolina; by lynching

sippi;

by ignorance

in

in Georgia;

Louisiana and by

all

by disfranchisement

these

in Missis-

and monopoly of wealth

in

the whole South.

There could be no more splendid vocation beckoning twentieth century, after the

flat failures

to the

youth of the

of white civilization, after the flamboy-

ant establishment of an industrial system which creates poverty and the

children of poverty which are ignorance and disease and crime; after the crazy boasting of a white culture that finally ended in wars which ruined civilization in the

whole world;

in the

midst of allied peoples

who

have yelled about

democracy and never practised it either in the British Empire or in the American Commonwealth or in South Carolina. Here is the chance for young women and young men of devotion to lift

549

Labor

Black and White

in

again the banner of humanity and to walk toward a civilization which will be free

and

which

intelligent;

will

be healthy and unafraid; and build

world a culture led by black folk and joined by peoples of races

— without poverty,

Once

a great

all

in the

colors

and

ignorance and disease!

German

poet cried: “Selig der den Er in Sieges Glanze

findet.” ”

“Happy man whom Death shall find in Victory’s splendor But I know a happier one: he who fights in despair and in defeat still fights. Singing with Arna Bontemps the quiet, determined philosophy of undefeatable

men: I

thought

I

saw an angel flying low,

I

thought

I

saw the

flicker of a

Above the mulberry

wing

but not again,

trees;

Bethesda sleeps. This ancient pool that healed

A

Host of bearded Jews does not awake.

This pool that once the angels troubled does not move.

No

angel

stirs it

now, no Saviour comes

With healing in His hands to raise the sick and bid the lame man leap upon the ground.

The golden

days are gone.

So long upon the marble

Why do we

steps,

wait

blood

open wounds? and why our black faces search the empty sky?

Falling from our

Do Is

there something

We

have

lost,

we have

wandering

forgotten?

Some

precious thing

in strange lands?

remember now, I beat my breast and cried, “Wash me God,” Wash me with a wave of wind upon The barley; O quiet one, draw near, draw near! Walk upon the hills with lovely feet And in the waterfall stand and speak!

There was

a day,

I

550

XI

Separatist

Solutions

If Du ,

Bois’s ideas

appeared

dictory during the 1930s as

hand, or denounced the than

Du

sacrosanct ideals that

become

increasingly inconsistent

he turned away from

on the

left

and

Integration

real.

to

racial integration,

other, the anomalies

were

class solidarity

and contra-

strategic

on the one

were more apparent agendas rather than

Bois was always willing to subordinate to the

categorical imperative of racial integrity

and

solidarity.

Struggle” (1921), he repudiated African-American

Thus,

in

membership

“The Class

in the

“world

editorials “Segregation”

and

“Separation and Self-Respect” (1934), for a concerted effort at separate,

self-

proletariat,” calling instead, in the

economic and

sustaining

inflammatory

political

development by black people.

Du

Bois

proposed a matrix of cooperative enterprises (“The C.M.A. Stores” [1937]) whose shared profits would steadily improve the conditions of African-

Americans

as they struggled against the forces of

conscious black ments,”

Du

man

white racism.

coooperating together in his

own

institutions

Bois argued in the vise of the Great Depression,

were scandalized and

and sometimes a

socialists

were puzzled

Du

seemed

socialist

Bois

to

as the

sometimes

embrace

in

is

the race-

and move-

“who

NAACP

eventually emancipate the colored race” [“Segregation”].

Within

“It

will

loyalists

integrationist

“A Negro Nation

Nation” (1935) both Booker T. Washington and Marcus Garvey.

Du

Neither partisans were placated by

proposing a pragmatic response to the ble fact of national

life,

of separate ethnic and

Bois’s defense that

racial segregation that

he was merely

was an ineradica-

but one that would ultimately yield before the power

economic groups

553

finally acting in

democratic concert.

The Class Struggle

The N.A.A.C.P.

We do not believe

quite true. in

has been accused of not being a “revolutionary” body. This

many parts

of this

life

mainly through reason,

and

in revolution.

this

world, but

We expect revolutionary changes we expect these changes

human sympathy and

We know that there

not by murder.

is

to

come

the education of children, and

have been times

when organized murder

seemed the only way out of wrong, but we believe those times have been very few, the cost of the remedy excessive, the results as terrible as beneficent, and

we

gravely doubt

the future there will be any real recurrent necessity for

if in

such upheaval.

Whether

this

true or not, the N.A.A.C.P.

is

organized to agitate, to

is

investigate, to expose, to defend, to reason, to appeal. this

is

more

the whole of our program. light; clear

What human

This

our program and

is

reform demands today

is

light,

thought, accurate knowledge, careful distinctions.

How far, for instance, does the dogma of the “class struggle” apply to black folk in the

United States to-day? Theoretically we are a part of the world

proletariat in the sense that

we are mainly an

exploited class of cheap laborers;

but practically we are not a part of the white proletariat and are not recognized

by that proletariat

to

any great extent.

We

are the victims of their physical

economic exclusion and personal hatred; and self defense we seek sheer subsistence we are howled down as “scabs”.

oppression, social ostracism,

when in Then .

consider another thing: the colored group

capitalists

and

laborers.

one hundred years such our

do

if

There are only the beginnings of such

we develop along conventional

fully separated classes,

capitalists

men

and our

have come

From The

Crisis,

lines

a division. In

we would have

but today to a very large extent our laborers are

capitalists are

our laborers.

to affluence largely

Our

small class of well-to-

through manual

been physically or mentally separated from the classes are sons

not yet divided into

is

toil

toilers.

Our

and daughters of porters, washerwomen and

June 1921.

555

and have never professional

laborers.

Separatist Solutions

Under

how

these circumstances

silly

it

would be

for us to try to

apply the

doctrine of the class struggle’without modification or thought. Let us take a particular instance.

tenement houses

years ago the Negroes of New York City lived in hired

Ten

in

Harlem, having gotten possession of them by paying

higher rents than white tenants.

and move have

If

they had tried to escape these high rents

where white laborers

into quarters

mobbed and murdered them. On heaven and earth either

raised

high.

Now between

this devil

to drive

lived, the

white laborers would

the other hand, the white capitalists

them out of Harlem

and deep

sea,

or keepiheir rents

what ought the Negro

socialist or

Negro conservative do? Manifestly there was only one thing for him to do, and that was to buy Harlem; but the buying of real estate calls for capital and credit, and the

the

Negro

radical or, for that matter, the

and

institutions that deal in capital

credit are capitalistic institutions. If

now,

Negro had begun to fight capital in Harlem, what capital was he fighting? If he fought capital as represented by white big real estate interests, he was wise; but he was also just as wise when he fought labor which insisted on segregating him in work and in residence. If, on the other hand, he fought the accumulating capital in his own group, the

which was destined in the years 1915 to 1920 to pay down $5,000,000 for real estate in Harlem, then he was slapping himself in his own face. Because either he must furnish capital for the buying of his own home, or rest naked in the slums and swamps.

It is

for this reason that there

is

today a strong

movement in

Negro bank, and a movement which is going soon to be successful. This Negro bank eventually is going to bring into cooperation and concentration the resources of fifty or sixty other Negro banks in the United States, and this aggregation of capital is going to be used to break the power of

Harlem

for a

white capital in enslaving and exploiting the darker world.

Whether this is

is

a

program of socialism or capitalism does not concern

the only program that

means

salvation to the

and the central question of the

Negro American group the capital

forced to go

which they must

controlled by a few

from our own to-day.

is

men

raise

for their

capitalists exactly

And while

this

the present actuality.

is If,

capitalistic

race.

development through which the

and

use. If this capital

benefit, then

we

doing

to

is

going

to

be

are destined to suffer

what we are suffering from white

capitalists

no worse than on the other hand, because of our more democratic not a pleasant prospect,

it is

certainly

organization and our widespread inter-class sympathy

more democratic

The main danger

the question of the ultimate control of

is

own

Negro

us. It

control, taking advantage of

introduce industrial democracy, then

we can introduce

what the white world

itself

we may not only escape our

present economic slavery but even guide and lead a distrait

556

is

a

economic world.

Segregation

The

thinking colored people of the United States must stop being stampeded

by the word segregation. The opposition

to racial segregation

is

not or should

not be any distaste or unwillingness of colored people to work with each other, to co-operate with

segregation States has

is

each other,

an opposition

been

to live with

each other. The opposition

to discrimination.

that usually

when

there

is

The

to

experience in the United

racial segregation, there

is

also

racial discrimination.

But the two things do not necessarily go together, and there should never be an opposition to segregation pure and simple unless that segregation does involve discrimination.

beside colored people nation,

if

protection,

hood.

Not only is there no objection if

if

is

water, sewerage

anybody of any color who wishes, can

The same way

people living

the surroundings and treatment involve no discrimi-

streets are well lighted, if there

and

to colored

in schools, there

is

no objection

colored pupils and taught by colored teachers.

On

and police

live in that

to schools

neighbor-

attended by

the contrary, colored

own contention be as fine human beings as any other sort of children, and we certainly know that there are no teachers better than trained colored teachers. But if the existence of such a school is made reason and pupils can by our

cause for giving

it

worse housing, poorer

poorer teachers, then

we do

object,

facilities,

and the objection

poorer equipment and is

not against the color

of the pupils’ or teachers’ skins, but against the discrimination. In the recent endeavor of the United States

government

to redistribute

some of the disadvantaged groups may get a chance for development, the American Negro should voluntarily and insistently demand his share. Groups of communities and farms inhabited by colored folk should be voluntarily formed. In no case should there be any discrimination against white and blacks. But, at the same time, colored people should come forward, capital so that

should organize and conduct enterprises, and their only insistence should be From The

Crisis,

January 1934.

557

Separatist Solutions

that the

same provisions be made

made

being

for the success of

for the success of their enterprise that

any other enterprise.

in tbe lines

must be remembered

advance of the colored people has

that in the last quarter of a century, the

been mainly

It

is

where they themselves working by and

them-

for

have accomplished the greatest advance.

selves,

numbers of white people, perhaps the majority of Americans, stand ready to take the most distinct advantage of voluntary segregation and cooperation among colored people. Just as soon as they get a group of black folk segregated, they use it as a point of attack and discriminaThere

is

no doubt

Our counter

tion.

that

attack should be, therefore, against this discrimination;

against the refusal of the South to spend the

black child as on the white child for

its

same amount of money on the

education; against the inability of black

groups to use public capital; against the monopoly of credit by white groups.

But never

in the

world should our fight be against association with ourselves

because by that very token we give up the whole argument that we are worth associating with.

Doubtless, and in the long run, the greatest to take place

is

going

under experiences of widest individual contact. Nevertheless,

today such individual contact prejudice, deliberate

is

made

difficult

and almost impossible by petty

and almost criminal propaganda and various

from prehistoric heathenism.

nium

human development

It is

survivals

impossible, therefore, to wait for the millen-

of free and normal intercourse before

we

unite, to cooperate

among

themselves in groups of like-minded people and in groups of people suffering

from the same disadvantages and the same hatreds. It is

the class-conscious working

man

uniting together

emancipate labor throughout the world. cooperating together in his ally

institutions

will eventually

the race-conscious black

and movements who

to

accomplish

determined cooperative

his

man

will eventu-

emancipate the colored race, and the great step ahead today

American Negro tary

own

It is

who

is

for the

economic emancipation through volun-

effort.

558

Separation and Self-Respect

What we States

is

continually face in this problem of race segregation in the United

a paradox like this:

Compulsory separation of human beings by. essentially artificial criteria, such as birth, nationality, language, color and race, is the cause of human hate, jealousy and war, and the destruction of talent and art. 2. Where separation of mankind into races, groups and classes is compulsory, either by law or custom, and whether that compulsion be temporary 1.

or permanent, the only effective defense that the segregated

and despised

group has against complete

internal self-

spiritual

and physical

disaster,

is

organization for self-respect and self-defense.

no escape. The black man born in South Carolina has a right and a duty to complain that any public school system separated by artificial race and class lines is needlessly expensive, socially dangerous, and spiritually degrading. And yet that black man will send

The dilemma

his child to a

is

Negro school, and he

Negro school

control, finances

by well-trained teachers.

all

an

as

A black man born by

will see to

in

class.

idiot or a

Boston has a right

He

has a duty to

to

He

he

it

really a

is

is

will

he has made

immature child

this

man,

that this

decently housed and

demand

a voice in

that asks for less than

is

the public school attended

the best and only door to true

man

in

Boston has no

academic pronouncement

to

send his

into school

this

black

where white children

kick, cuff or

own

abuse

him, or where teachers openly and persistently neglect or hurt or dwarf soul. If

he does, he must not be surprised

if

Crisis,

March

1934.

559

its

the boy lands in the gutter or

penitentiary. Moreover, our Boston brother has

From The

its

oppose any separation of schools

insist that

democracy and human understanding. But helpless

if

coward.

kinds and conditions of people,

right, after

it,

and curriculum, and any action of his

mark him

by color, race or

is

the best possible school; that

is

effectively taught

this will

complete and there

no

right to sneer at the “Jim-

Separatist Solutions

starvation wage; nor

move

to

who

guide them

at

can he conscientiously advise the South Carolinian

to

Crow” schools of South Carolina,

or at the brave teachers

Boston and join the bread

lines.

Let the N.A.A.C.P. and every upstanding Negro pound at the closed gates of opportunity and denounce caste and segregation; but

own

children under the curious impression that

oppressors. Let us not affront our

equality it

which

is

own

we

let

us not punish our

are punishing our white

by accepting a proffered

self-respect

not equality, or submitting to discrimination simply because

does not involve actual and open segregation; and above

down and do nothing

and self-organization

for self-defense

us not

all, let

just

are too stupid or too distrustful of ourselves to take vigorous

sit

because we

and decisive

action.

Race segregation

in the

United States too often presents

ual problem; a question of

question as to whether

I

my

admission to

shall live

own enjoyment, emolument

and work

tion

Negroes were

first

an individ-

church or that theater;

this

in Mississippi or

a

New York for my

or convenience.

In fact this matter of segregation

When

itself as

brought

was economic rather than

to

a

is

group matter with long historic

America

racial.

in

any numbers, their

They were

in law

roots.

classifica-

and custom classed

with the laborers, most of whom were brought from Europe under a contract

which made them

practically serfs. In this laboring class there

was

at first

no

some inter-marriage and when the laborer gained his freedom, he became in numbers of cases a landholder and a voter. The first distinction arose between laborers who had come from Europe segregation, there was

and contracted

to

work

for a

term of years, and laborers from Africa and the

West Indies who had made no contract. Both

classes

were often held

for life,

but soon there arose a distinction between servants for a term of years and servants for

life.

Even

their

admission to a Christian church organization was

usually considered as emancipating a servant for

life,

and thus again the

purely racial segregation was cut across by religious considerations. Finally,

however, slavery became a matter of

laborers served for definite terms

even here anomaly arose free.

racial caste, so that

and most black workers

in the case of the small

white

serv^ed for life.

But

number of Negroes who were

For a while these free Negroes were not definitely segregated from other

free workers,

but gradually they were forced together as a caste, holding

themselves, on the one hand,

strictly

away from the

slaves,

and on the

other,

being excluded more and more severely from inter-course with whites of

all

degrees.

The

result

was that there grew up

in the

determination and a prejudice which has bitterly

with every

means

at their

minds of the

come down

command

560

to

free

Negro

class a

our day. They fought

against being classed with the

Separation and Self-Respect

mass of slaves.

was

It

for this reason that they ohjected to

being called Negroes.

Negroes was synonymous with slaves. They were not slaves. They objected to being coupled with black folk by legislation or custom. Any such act threatened their own freedom. They developed, therefore, both North and South as a separate, isolated group. In large

Southern

nah and Charleston, they organized

made themselves

churches, and

a

their

New Orleans,

cities, like

own society,

Savan-

established schools

complete segregated

and

unit, except in their

economic relations where they earned a living among the whites as artisans and servants, rising here and there to be semi-professional men and small merchants. The higher they rose and the more definite and effective their organization, the more they protested against being called Negroes or classed with Negroes, because Negroes were slaves. In the North, the

mainly the same

New

Haven,

lines.

development

The groups

New York,

somewhat, and yet followed

differed

of free colored folk in Boston, Newport,

Philadelphia, Baltimore and Cincinnati,

small, carefully organized groups, with their

with their

own

Negroes. As the

formed

schools and churches,

own protest against being classed as mass of Negroes became free in the Northern states, certain social life, with their

decisions were forced

An

own

all

upon

these groups. Take for instance, Philadelphia.

may be

event happened in April 1787, which

The

Negro, the Creat Decision.

free colored

time were making a desperate fight

called by the

American

people of Philadelphia at that

for recognition

and decent

social treat-

ment.

Two of their leaders,

Richard Allen and Absalom Jones, had proffered their

services during the terrible

epidemic

in

1

792, and partly at their

helped bury the deserted dead of the white

mended them. Both Church, then

these

men

folk.

worshipped

expense,

properly

com-

Ceorges Methodist they had been made wel-

at

4th and Vine Streets. For years

at

The Mayor

own

St.

come; but as gradual emancipation progressed in Pennsylvania, Negroes began to pour in to the city from the surrounding country, and black Christians

became

prayer, Jones

get

too

at St.

and Allen were on

up and go

refused to

numerous

stir

to the gallery

Ceorge

s.

their knees,

One Sunday morning when

where hereafter black

until the prayer

during

they were told they must folk

would worship. They

was over, and then they got up and

left

the

church. They never went back.

Under these circumstances, what would you have done. Dear Reader of 1934? There were several possibilities. You might have been able to impress it upon the authorities of the church that you were not like other Negroes; that you were different, with more wealth and intelligence, and that while it might be quite

all

right

and even agreeable

to the gallery, that

you

as

to

an old and

you that other Negroes should be sent

tried

561

member

of the church should be

Separatist Solutions

allowed to worship as you pleased.

If you

had

said this,

it

probably would have

upon the deacons of St. George s. In that case, what would you have done? You could walk out of the church but whither would you walk? There were no other white churches that wanted you. Most of them would not have allowed you to cross their threshold. The others would have segregated you in the gallery or at a separate service. You might have said with full right and reason that the action of St. George s was un-Ghristian and despicable, and dangerous for the future of democracy in Philadelphia and in the United States. That was all quite true, and nevertheless its statement had absolutely no effect upon St. George s. Walking out of this church, these two men formed an organization. It was called the Free African Society. Virtually it was confined to a colored membership, although some of the Quakers visited the meetings from time to time and gave advice. Probably there was some discussion of taking the group into the had no

effect

fellowship of the Quakers, but liberal as the Quakers were, they were not

looking for Negro proselytes.

They had had a few

in the

West Indies but not

in

The excluded Negroes found themselves in a dilemma. They could do one of two things: They could ask to be admitted as a segregated group in some white organization; or they could form their own organization. It the United States.

was an

historic decision

and they did both.

Richard Allen formed from the larger part of the group, the African

Methodist Episcopal Ghurch, which today has 750,000 members and

is

without doubt the most powerful single Negro organization in the United

Absalom Jones formed St. Thomas Ghurch as a separate Negro church the Episcopal communion, and the church has had a continuous existence

States.

in

down to our day. Which of these two methods was those

who think that it was

best will be a matter of debate.

There

are

saving something of principle to remain in a white

church, even as a segregated body. There are others

who

say that this action

was simply a compromise with the devil and that having been kicked out of the Methodist

Ghurch and not allowed

there was nothing for a self-respecting his

equality in the Episcopal

man

to

do but

to establish a

Ghurch,

church of

own.

No

matter which solution seems to you wisest, segregation was com-

pulsory;

and the only answer

answer that was inevitable

to

it

in 1787,

was internal self-organization; and the is

just as inevitable in 1934.

562

A Negro Nation Within the Nation

No more today

— not in

Negro

the

faced the Negroes of America than that of

critical situation ever

for

More than

1830, nor in 1861, nor in 1867.

elementary

justice falls

ever the appeal of

on deaf ears.

Three-fourths of us are disfranchised; yet no writer on democratic reform,

movement says a word about Negroes. The

no

third party

in

1912 refused

to notice

Bull

them; the La Follette uprising

aware of them; the Socialists

still

keep them

children are systematically denied education; Association asks for Federal aid to education

perpetuated by the present local authorities.

in the

when it

Moose crusade

1924 was hardly

in

background. Negro

the National Education

permits discrimination to be

Once

or twice a

month Negroes

convicted of no crime are openly and publicly lynched, and even burned; yet a National

Crime Convention

is

brought

of this only by mass picketing and every qualification

was black there

is

and unwilling notice

illegal agitation.

When

a

man

with

refused a position simply because his great-grandfather

not a ripple of

is

but

all

to perfunctory

comment

or protest.

Long before the depression Negroes in the South were losing “Negro” jobs, those assigned them by common custom — poorly paid and largely undesirable toil, but nevertheless life-supporting. New techniques, new enterprises, mass production, impersonal ownership and control have been largely

dis-

placing the skilled white and Negro worker in tobacco manufacturing, in iron

and

steel, in

restricted

lumbering and mining, and

more and more

paid and worst kind. In

were from the

first

to

in transportation.

Negroes are now

common labor and domestic service of the lowest

textile,

chemical and other manufactures Negroes

nearly excluded, and just as slavery kept the poor white out

of profitable agriculture, so freedom prevents the poor Negro from finding a place in manufacturing. From Current

History,

The world-wide

42 (June 1935): 265-270.

563

decline in agriculture has moreover

Separatist Solutions

carried the mass of black farmers, despite heroic endeavor

down to the level of landless* tenants and peons. The World War and its wild aftermath seemed

for a

among

the few,

moment to open

door; 2,000,000 black workers rushed North to work in iron and steel,

automobiles and pack meat, build houses and do the heavy

They met first the

toil in factories.

closed trade union which excluded

and pushed them

jobs

new make

a

mobbed them. Then

into the low-wage gutter,

they

met

Since 1929 Negro workers,

had mortgages foreclosed on

them from the best paid denied them homes and

the Depression. like

white workers, have

their farms

lost their jobs,

and homes, have used up

have

their small

Negro worker, everything has been worse in larger or smaller degree; the loss has been greater and more permanent. Technological displacement, which began before the Depression, has been savings. But, in the case of the

accelerated, while

went

to

unemployment and

lower levels and will

Negro public schools Southern

men sooner,

South have often disappeared, while

crowded

to suffocation.

The Booker Washington

in Atlanta, built for 1,000 pupils, has 3,000 attending in

daily sessions.

the Negro.

wages struck black

last longer.

in the rural

city schools are

High School

falling

Above

It is

but

all.

Federal and State relief holds out

human

that the

white child should be relieved

first

little

promise

unemployed white man and the by local authorities

who

double for

starving

them

regard

as

fellow-men, but often regard Negroes as subhuman. Wliile the white worker has sometimes been given

more than

relief

and been helped

to his feet, the

black worker has often been pauperized by being just kept from starvation.

There are some plans for national rehabilitation and the rebuilding of the whole industrial system. Such plans should provide for the Negro s future relations to

American industry and

not only unprepared to

make but

culture, but those provisions the country refuses to consider.

In the Tennessee Valley beneath the Norris in?

And what

shall

is

Dam, where do Negroes come

be their industrial place? In the attempt

agriculture the Southern landholder will in

but the black tenant has been pushed

to the

all

probability be put

to

rebuild

on

his feet,

edge of despair. In the matter of

housing, no comprehensive scheme for Negro

and only two or three

local projects

until the nation or the

Negroes

homes has been thought out planned. Nor can broad plans be made

community decides where

it

wants or

will

permit

Negroes are largely excluded from subsistence homesteads because Negroes protested against segregation, and whites, anxious for cheap to live.

local labor, also protested.

Hie

colored people of America are coming to face the fact quite calmly that most white Americans do not like them, and are planning neither for their survival,

nor

for their definite future if

it

564

involves free, self-assertive

modern

A

Negro Nation Within the Nation

manhood. This does not mean all Americans. A saving few are worried about the Negro problem; a still larger group are not ill-disposed, but they fear prevailing public opinion.

The

great mass of Americans are, however, merely

representatives of average humanity. affairs

and scarcely can be expected

whom

people For

their

own

to take seriously the affairs of strangers or

they partly fear and partly despise.

many years

the insensibility

know of or

They muddle along with

was the theory of most Negro leaders that this attitude was of ignorance and inexperience, that white America did not it

realize the continuing plight of the Negro. Accordingly, for the last

two decades, we have striven by book and periodical, by speech and appeal, by various dramatic methods of agitation, to put the essential facts before the

American people. Today there can be no doubt that Americans know the facts; and yet they remain for the most part indifferent and unmoved. The main weakness of the Negro’s position is that since emancipation he has never had an adequate economic foundation. Thaddeus Stevens recog-

nized this and sought to transform the emancipated freedmen into peasant proprietors. If

history of the

he had succeeded, he would have changed the economic

United States and perhaps saved the American farmer from

his

present plight. But to furnish 50,000,000 acres of good land to the Negroes

would have

cost

more money than

the North was willing to pay, and was

regarded by the South as highway robbery.

The whole attempt

land and capital for the freedmen

to furnish

fell

through, and no comprehensive economic plan was advanced until the

advent of Booker T. Washington.

He had a vision

of building a

new economic

He wanted

foundation for Negroes by incorporating them into white industry. to

make them

skilled workers

capitalists to rise

by industrial education and expected small

out of their ranks. Unfortunately, he assumed that the

economic development of America

in the twentieth century

would resemble

that of the nineteenth century, with free industrial opportunity,

and unlimited resources under the control of small competitive lived to see industry

and

a result,

became

for

less a

The chance

Hampton

or Tuskegee

becoming a capitalist white Americans, while the whole relation of labor

could adjust their curricula.

to capital

He

changed by wide introduction of machinery.

technology advanced more rapidly than

grew slimmer, even

capitalists.

more and more concentrated, land monopoly extended

industrial technique

As

cheap land

of an artisan’s

matter of technical

skill

than of basic organization

and aim.

Those of us who

in that

foresee exactly the kind of that the

day opposed Booker Washington’s plans did not

change

Negro could succeed

that was

in industry

leadership and far-reaching ideals.

The

coming, but we were convinced

and

in life

only

if

he had

object of education,

565

we

intelligent

declared, was

Separatist Solutions

not

make men

'‘to

but to make artisans men.”

artisans

America needed leadership so guide themselves to

that,

when change and

The

to

came, they could

is still

small, but

it is

large

begin planning for preservation through economic advancement.

movement

definite

first

in

safety.

The educated group among American Negroes enough

crisis

The Negroes

of the Negro with the labor

of this younger group was toward direct alliance

movement. But white labor today

as in the past

refuses to respond to these overtures.

For a hundred years, beginning in the Thirties and Forties of the nineteenth century, the white laborers of Ohio, Pennsylvania and

New York beat,

murdered and drove away fellow-workers because they were black and had to work for what they could get. Seventy years ago in New York, the centre of the

new American

movement, white laborers hanged black ones to lamp posts instead of helping to free them from the worst of modern slavery. In Chicago and St. Louis, New Orleans and San Francisco, black men still carry the scars of the bitter hatred of white laborers for them. Today it is white labor labor

Negroes out of decent low-cost housing, that confines the protec-

that keeps

tion of the best unions to “white”

who already have

with black folk to hate scabs;

but

they are black.

It

it

Negroes can the

unions.

man

sit

same

in the

hall

movement. White labor has

kill

into labor fellowship.

them. In the present

company unions

it is

It

mobs

American

fight of the

attacking the only unions

join.

Negro

No Negro, no

joined the labor

mobs white scabs to force them

Federation of Labor against

Thus

that often will not

hates black scabs not because they are scabs but because

black scabs to starve and

that

men,

s

fight to enter organized industry has

matter what his

He cannot

ability,

can be a

made

member of any

little

[of|

headway.

the railway

be an engineer, fireman, conductor, switchman, brake-

or yardman. If he organizes separately, he may, as in the case of the

Negro Firemen

s

the case of the

Pullman

Union, be assaulted and even Porters’

Union, he

this

and simply say

it is

may

by white firemen. As

in

empty recognition The older group of Negro leaders

without any voice or collective help. recognize

killed

receive

a matter of continued striving to break

down

these barriers.

Such

The

facts are,

interests of labor are

welcome to

however, slowly forcing Negro thought into

is

new

considered rather than those of capital.

expected from the labor monopolist

keep Chinese, Japanese and Negroes

who mans

in their places

channels.

No

greater

armies and navies

than from the captains

who spend large sums of money to make laborers think that the most worthless white man is better than any colored man. The Negro must prove his necessity to the labor movement and that it is a disastrous error to leave him out of the foundation of the new industrial State. He must settle of industry

566

A

Negro Nation Within the Nation

beyond cavil the question of his economic and controller of capital.

The dilemma Johnson

a

chance

efficiency as a worker, a

of these younger thinkers gives

methods

to insist that the older

men

are

survive only by being integrated into the nation,

like

manager

James Weldon

the best; that

still

we can

we must consequently fight segregation now and always and force our way by appeal, agitation and law. This group, however, does not seem to recognize the fundamental economic bases of

American tion

industry. Greater

bound

is

social

and

that

growth and the changes that face

democratic control of production and distribu-

and monopolistic methods. democracy we can hope for progres-

to replace existing autocratic

In this broader

and more

intelligent

and anomalies of race prejudice, but we cannot and complete disappearance. Above all, the doubt, deep-

sive softening of the asperities

hope

for

its

early

planted in the American mind, as to the Negros ability and efficiency as worker, artisan and administrator will fade but slowly. Thus, with increased

democratic control of industry and capital, the place of the Negro increasingly a matter of

human

will

be

choice, of willingness to recognize ability

across the barriers of race, of putting

authority by public opinion. At present,

fit

Negroes

on the

in places of

railroads, in

power and

manufacturing, in

the telephone, telegraph and radio business, and in the larger divisions of trade,

it is

what his

only under exceptional circumstances that any Negro, no matter

an opportunity for position and power. Only

ability, gets

where individual enterprise

still

counts, as in

some of the

of the trades, in a few branches of retail business and in

Negro expect

professions, in a few

can the

artistic careers,

narrow opening.

a

Negroes and other colored numbers. Slavery, prostitution

folk, nevertheless, exist in larger

to

have not killed them and cannot

and

in those lines

dissatisfaction.

They occupy

and growing

white men, theft of their labor and goods kill

them. They are growing

in intelligence

strategic positions, within nations

and be-

amid valuable raw material and on the highways of future expansion. They will survive, but on what terms and conditions? On this point a new school of Negro thought is arising. It believes in the ultimate uniting of mankind and in a unified American nation, with economic classes and racial sides nations,

barriers leveled, but

such intensified rather than

of

believes this

it

class

is

an ideal and

and race consciousness

mere humanitarian appeals

to

is

to

be realized only by

as will bring irresistible force

bear on the motives and actions

men.

The

peculiar position of Negroes in America offers an opportunity. Ne-

groes today cast probably 2,000,000 votes in a total of 40,000,000, and their vote will increase. This gives them, particularly in Northern critical times, a

chance

to

cities,

and

at

hold a very considerable balance of power, and the

567

Separatist Solutions

mere

threat of this being used intelligently

mean much. The consuming-power been estimated

ligently directed.

of 2,800,000 Negro families has recently

$166,000,000 a month

at

and with determination may often

— a tremendous power when intel-

man power as laborers probably equals that of Mexico illiteracy is much lower than that of Spain or Italy. Their

Their

or Yugoslavia. Their

estimated per capita wealth about equals that of Japan.

For a nation with this the salvation of a white

power

their

as

culture and efficiency to

start in

God

is

idiotic.

sit

With the use of their

consumers, and their brain power, added

down and political

to that

power,

chance of

personal appeal which proximity and neighborhood always give to beings, Negroes can develop in the United States an

await

human

economic nation within

work through inner cooperation, to found its own institueducate its genius, and at the same time, without mob violence or

a nation, able to tions, to

extremes of race hatred, to keep in helpful touch and cooperate with the mass of the nation. This has happened

more

often than most people realize, in the

case of groups not so obviously separated from the mass of people as are

American Negroes. Negro in America.

must happen

It

Any movement toward such

a

our case, or there

in

program

is

no hope

for the

today hindered by the absurd

is

Negro philosophy of Scatter, Suppress, Wait, Escape. There are even many of our educated young leaders who think that because the Negro problem is not in evidence where there are few or no Negroes, this indicates a way out! They think that the problem of race can be settled by ignoring reference to

people to

it.

They

settle the

think that

problem

we have only

for us;

and

it

and suppressing all

to wait in silence for the

finally

white

and predominantly, they think

problem of 12,000,000 Negro people, mostly poor, ignorant workers, is going to be settled by having their more educated and wealthy classes gradually and continually escape from their race into the mass of the Amerithat the

can people, leaving the

rest to sink, suffer

Proponents of this program claim, with masses that

is

rising, the is

die.

much

reason, that the plight of the

not the fault of the emerging classes. For the slavery and exploitation

reduced Negroes

group

and

to their present level or at

white world

any

rate

hindered them from

blame. Since the age-long process of raising a through the escape of its upper class into welcome fellowship with

risen peoples, the

is

Negro

to the task of lifting

to

would submerge itself if it bent its back the mass pf people. There is logic in this answer, but futile intelligentsia

logic. If

the leading

Negro

classes

cannot assume and bear the

uplift of their

doomed for all time. It is not a case of ethics; it is case of necessity. The method by which this may be done is, first, American Negro to achieve a new economic solidarity. proletariat, they are

568

own

a plain for the

A There

exists

today a chance for the Negroes to organize a cooperative State

own

within their

Negro Nation Within the Nation

group. By letting Negro fanners feed Negro artisans, and

Negro technicians guide Negro home industries, and Negro thinkers plan this integration of cooperation, while Negro artists dramatize and beautify the struggle, economic independence can be achieved. To doubt that this is possible

is

doubt the

to

essential

humanity and the quality of brains of the

American Negro.

No sooner is this proposed than a great fear sweeps over older Negroes. They cry

“No

segregation”

— no further yielding to prejudice and

race separation.

Yet any planning for the benefit of American Negroes on the part of a Negro intelligentsia

is

going to involve organized and deliberate self-segregation.

There are plenty of people to use

such a plan

as a

in the

way to

races.

What of it?

must be faced.

economic and

who would be

only too willing

increase existing legal and customary segregation

This threat which

between the It

United States

many Negroes

see

is

no mere mirage.

American Negro calls for an increase in segregation and prejudice, then that must come. American Negroes must plan for their economic future and the social survival of their fellows in the firm belief that this means in a real sense the survival of colored If

the

folk in the

cultural salvation of the

world and the building of a

t)Tanny. Control of their

own

full

humanity instead of a

education, which

is

petty white

the logical and inevitable

end of separate schools, would not be an unmixed ill; it might prove a supreme good. Negro schools once meant poor schools. They need not today; they must not tomorrow. Separate Negro sections will increase race antagonism, but they will also increase economic cooperation, organized selfdefense and necessary self-confidence.

The immediate reaction of most white and colored people to this suggestion will

be that the thing cannot be done without extreme

have from time

to

time emphasized the

fact that

results.

Negro thinkers

no nation within

a nation

be built because of the attitude of the dominant majority, and because

all

can

legal

and police power is out of Negro hands, and because large-scale industries, like steel and utilities, are organized on a national basis. White folk, on the other granting certain obvious exceptions, the American

hand, simply say

that,

Negro has not the

ability to

such

self-restraint, careful

In reply,

it

may be

engineer so delicate a social operation calling for

organization and sagacious leadership.

said that this matter of a nation within a nation has

already been partially accomplished in the organization of the Negro church,

Negro school and the Negro retail business, and, despite all the justly due criticism, the result has been astonishing. The great majority of American the

Negroes are divided not only

for religious

but for a large

number

of social

purposes into self-supporting economic units, self-governed, self-directed.

569

The

Separatist Solutions

greatest difficulty

is

that these organizations have

no

logical

and reasonable

standards and do not attract the finest, most vigorous and best educated

Negroes. Wlien

becomes clearer to more and more American Negroes that, through voluntary and increased segregation, by careful autonomy and planned economic organization, they may build so strong and efficient a unit that 12,000,000 men can no longer be refused fellowship and equality in the United States. all

these things are taken into consideration

570

it

The C.M.A.

Stores

on the edge of the crash came an attempt of the Negro Business League, under the leadership of A. C. Holsey, to start a country-wide experiment in

Just

Negro

These Colored Merchants Association stores were frankly after the pattern of modern retail business and there was no attempt to include any ideas of cooperation except very commendable efforts to standardize business.

methods and appearances and

to

some

extent to organize buying. Here, too,

doomed to failure. It depended on and was encouraged by who were beginning to be hard pressed by the chain store

the enterprise was the wholesalers, organizations.

goods

as

There was

little

cheaply as the chain

hope

that these wholesalers could or

stores.

The main weapon which

would

sell

the Negroes

had, they failed even to attempt to use, and that was their organized buying

power. This buying power could only be held in loyalty to business the profit, and there was stores

no attempt

to introduce

have practically gone out of existence

last

The C.M.A.

it is

interesting to

know

that

year the leader of the enterprise, Mr. Holsey, himself took a course of

study in co-operation and

From

shared

as a nation-wide organization,

although some single establishments remain; but only

such sharing.

if it

we may hope

the Pittsburgh Courier, July 31, 1937.

571

to

hear from him again.

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XII

Radical

Thought

Socialism

and

Communism

Du

Bois’s socialist proclivities

were unmistakable

Repeatedly, the stumbling block to his socialism or

communism, but

communists,

as

he revealed

in

“Lifting

conversion was not the tenets of

American socialists and “Socialism and the Negro Problem” (1913) and

“The Negro and Communism” was firmly fixed

full

the racism of white

(1931). His admiration of state

after visits to Russia in

from the Bottom [1937]”).

Du

States

— at

official entry into

age ninety-three

— soon

Bois was enraptured by first-hand

the

in the

“My

— “The

Vast Miracle of

Communist

China

Party of the United

followed, but well before then, in such

influential works as Black Reconstruction in

[1935],

communism

1926 and 1935 (“Russia, 1926 [1926],”

observation of China’s Great Leap Forward

Today” [1959]. His

in his earliest writings.

America (“The Black Worker”)

Evolving Program for Negro Freedom” (1944), and thinkpieces

National Guardian (“There Must

Come

a Vast Social

Change

in the

United States” [1951]) and Monthly Review (“Negroes and the Crisis of Capitalism in the United States” [1953]), Du Bois had erected high signposts along the road to Moscow.

575

Socialism and the

Negro Problem

One might

divide those interested in Socialism in two distinct camps:

On

hand those far-sighted thinkers who are seeking to determine from the facts of modern industrial organization just what the outcome is going to be; on the other hand, those who suffer from the present industrial situation and who are anxious that, whatever the broad outcome may be, at any rate the present suffering which they know so well shall be stopped. It is this second class of social thinkers who are interested particularly in the Negro the one

problem. They are saying that the plight of ten million

United States predominantly of the working

much is

attention in any

addressed not to

and

its

thesis

is:

program of future

this class,

In the

class,

human

so evil that

is

social reform.

but rather to the class of theoretical

Negro problem

as

it

is

no doubt

presents

as to the alternatives presented.

are 90 million white people

who

itself in

On

in their extraordinary

it

calls for

This paper, however,

States, theoretical Socialism of the twentieth century

lemma. There

beings in the

meets

Socialists;

the United

a critical di-

the one hand, here

development present a

peculiar field for the application of Socialistic principles; but on the whole,

demanding

these people are

the

to-day that just as

Negro has been the excluded

program in this

shall also

program.

{i.e.,

capitalistic organization

exploited) class, so, too, any Socialistic

exclude the ten million.

No recent convention

under

Many

Socialists

have acquiesced

of Socialists has dared to face

fairly

the

Negro problem and make a straight-forward declaration that they regard Negroes as men in the same sense that other persons are. The utmost that the party has

been able

convention. this:

The

to

do

is

not to rescind the declaration of an earlier

general attitude of thinking

members

of the party has been

We must not turn aside from the great objects of Socialism to take up this

From New

Review, February

1,

1913: 138-141.

577

Communism

Radical Thought: Socialism and

issue of the

American Negro;

Socialism are achieved,

when

the question wait;

let

this. problem will

the objects of

be settled along with other prob-

lems.

That there is a logical flaw here, no one can deny. Can the problem of any group of ten million be properly considered as “aside” from any program of

Can the objects of Socialism be achieved so long as the Negro is Can any great human problem “wait”? If Socialism is going to

Socialism?

neglected?

the American problem of race prejudice without direct attack along

settle

these lines by Socialists,

why

lines? Indeed, there

a kind of fatalistic attitude

is it

necessary for Socialists to fight along other

on the part of certain transcendental Socialists, which often assumes that the whole battle of Socialism is coming by a kind of evolution in which active individual effort on their part

is

hardly necessary.

As a matter of

Negro

is

fact,

Can

this question:

Socialistic

the Socialists face in the problem of the

problem?

a minority of any

group or country be

American

left

out of the

of course, agreed that a majority could not be

It is,

out. Socialists usually put great stress

on the

fact that the laboring class

left

form a

majority of all nations and nevertheless are unjustly treated in the distribution of wealth. Suppose, however, that this unjust distribution affected only a minority,

and

that only a tenth of the

American nation were working under unjust economic conditions: Could a Socialistic program be carried out which acquiesced in this condition? Many American Socialists seem silently to assume that this would be possible. To put it concretely, they are going to carry on industry so far as the mass is concerned; they are going to get rid of the private control of capital

among

and they are going

to divide

up the

social

income

these 90 million in accordance with

in the present

haphazard way: But

at the

some rule of reason, rather than same time, they are going to permit

the continued exploitation of these ten million workers. So far as these ten million workers are concerned, there is to be no active effort to secure

for

them

a voice in the Social

income. The idea

is

that

Democracy, or an adequate share ultimately when the 90 millions come

they will voluntarily share with the ten million

Does the Frankly,

I

it

which the world has always

does.

The program

tried; the

to their

own,

serfs.

history of the world justify us in expecting

do not believe

in the social

is

any such outcome?

that of industrial aristocracy

only difference being that such Socialists

are trying to include in the inner circle a

much

number than have ever been included before. Socialistic as this program may be called, it is not real Social Democracy. The essence of Social Democracy is that there shall be no excluded or exploited classes in the Socialistic

man

or

woman

larger

state; that

so poor, ignorant or black as not to

578

there shall be no

count one.

Is

this

simply a

Socialism

far off ideal, or

is it

and

program?

a possible

Negro Problem

the

1

have

eome

to believe that the test of

any great movement toward soeial reform is the Exeluded Class. Who is it that Reform does not propose to benefit? If you are saving dying babies, whose babies are you going to (regretfully,

making

let die? If you are

perhaps but none the

a juster division of wealth,

to allow to

but also in

going to

less truly)

let starve? If

what people are you going

to

you are

permit

at

you are giving all men votes (not only in the the eeonomie world) wliat elass of people are you going

present to remain in poverty? “politieal”

feeding the hungry, what folk are you

If

remain disfranehised?

More than

that,

assuming that

the growing Socialistie state, repair the temporary

you did exelude Negroes temporarily from the ensuing uplift of humanify would in the end if

damage, the present question

can you exelude the

is,

Negro and push Soeialism forward? Every tenth man in the United States is of aeknowledged Negro deseent; if you take those in gainful oeeupations, one out of every seven Amerieans is eolored; and if you take laborers and workingmen in the ordinary aeeeptation of the term, one out of every five is eolored. The problem then is to lift four-fifths of a group on the baeks of the other fifth. Even if the submerged fifth were “dull driven cattle,” this program of Socialistic opportunism would not be easy. But when the program is proposed in the face of a group growing in intelligence

and

power and

social

a

group made

suspicious and bitter by analogous action on the part of trade unionists, what

anti-Negro Socialism doing but handing to of four and one-half million

men who

is

enemies the powerful weapon

its

will find

not simply to their interest,

it

hut a sacred duty to underbid the labor market, vote against labor legislation,

and

fight to

keep their fellow laborers down.

Is it

not significant that Negro

army are healthier and desert less than whites? Nor is this all: what becomes of Socialism when it engages in such a fight for human dow nfall? Whither are gone its lofty aspiration and high resolve — its songs and comradeship? The Negro Problem then is the great test of the American Socialist. Shall American Socialism strive to train for its Socialistic state ten million serfs who w'ill serve or be exploited by the state, or shall it strive to incorporate them immediately into that body politic? Theoretically, of course, all Socialists, soldiers in the

w'ith

few exceptions, w^ould wash the

United States there

is

latter

a strong local

program. But

it

happens

that in the

opinion in the South which violently

opposed any program of any kind of reform that recognizes the Negro

man. So strong

this

is

body of opinion

extraordinary development.

by

men

like Blease

such demagogues

The whole

that

you have

radical

movement

and Vardaman and Tillman and

as

Hoke Smith,

includes in

579

in the

its

Jeff.

South

a

as a

most

there represented

Davis and attracting

program of radical reform

a

Communism

Radical Thought: Socialism and

most bitter and reactionary hatred of the Negro. The average modern

Socialist

can scarcely grasp the extent of this hatred; even murder and torture of human beings holds a prominent place in

women

is its

joke,

and

justice

its

philosophy; the defilement of colored

toward colored

men

will

not be listened

to.

The

only basis on which one can even approach these people with a plea for the barest tolerance of colored folk,

colored

men may

possibly hurt white

finds itself in this predicament: if to turn the

that the

is

it

murder and mistreatment of

men. Consequently the

acquiesces in race hatred,

Socialist party

it

has a chance

tremendous power of Southern white radicalism toward

its

own

becomes a “party of the Negro,” with its growth South and North decidedly checked. There are signs that the Socialist leaders are going to accept the chance of getting hold of the radical South whatever its party; if

cost.

it

does not do

This paper

is

this,

it

written to ask such leaders: After you have gotten the radical

South and paid the price which they demand,

580

will the result

be Socialism?

Russia, 1926

I

am

writing this in Russia.

am

I

sitting in

Revolution Square opposite the

Second House of the Moscow Soviets and in a hotel run by the Soviet Government. Yonder the sun pours into my window over the domes and eagles

and pointed towers of the Kremlin. Here

inner

city;

there

is

the old Chinese wall of the

the gilded glor}' of the Cathedral of Christ, the Savior.

is

Thro’ yonder gate on the vast Red Square, Lenin sleeps his

last sleep,

with

long lines of people peering each day into his dead and speaking face. Around

me I

roars a city of tu^o millions

have been

in Russia

— Holy Moscow.

something

of war and blood and rapine.

less

I

than two months.

know nothing

police and underground propaganda. is

I

did not see the Russia

of political prisoners, secret

My knowledge of the Russian language

sketchy and of this vast land, the largest single country on earth,

I

have

traveled over only a small, a very small part.

But

I

have had certain advantages;

traveled over tw'o thousand miles its

towns, the Neva, Dneiper,

land and village.

I

and

I

have seen something of Russia.

visited four of

Moscow and

its

rivers,

have looked into the faces of

its

races

have had personal friends,

They were born

This, with culty, I

my

English,

whom

in Russia

knew

To help my

before

I

came

and

Crisis,

Tartars,

lack of language

I

to Russia, as inter-

diffi-

it.

official

investigation in gangs

and crowds nor

Foreign Bureau; but have in nearly friend. In this

museums, summer colonies of children,

November

of

stretches of

— Jews,

way

schools, universities, factories, stores, printing establishments,

From The

many

French, has helped the language

gone alone with one Russian speaking

offices, palaces,

have

and speak English, French and German.

my sight seeing and

according to the program of the cases

I

German and

but did not, of course, solve

have not done

largest cities,

Volga of

Gypsies, Caucasians, Armenians and Chinese.

preters.

its

I

1926.

581

I

all

have seen

government

libraries,

churches.

Radical Thought: Socialism and

Communism

monasteries, boyar houses, theatres, moving-picture houses, day nurseries and co-operatives.

I

have seen some celebrations

— self-governing

children in a

school house of an evening and 200,000 children and youths marching on

Youth Day.

I

have talked with peasants and laborers. Commissars of the

Republic, teachers and children.

Alone and unaccompanied

I

have walked the miles of streets in Leningrad,

Moscow, Nijni Novgorod and Kiev at morning, noon and night; I have trafficked on the curb and in the stores; I have watched crowds and audiences and groups. I have gathered some documents and figures, plied officials and teachers with questions and sat still and gazed at this Russia, that the spirit of its life and people might enter my veins. I

stand in astonishment and wonder at the revelation of Russia that has

to

me.

with

I

may be

my

partially

deceived and half-informed. But

eyes and heard with

my

ears in Russia

Bolshevik.

582

is

if

what

I

come

have seen

Bolshevism,

I

am

a

The Negro and Communism

The

Scottsboro, Alabama, cases have brought squarely before the

Negro the question of his

The importance

attitude toward

American

Communism.

of the Russian Revolution can not be gainsaid.

It is

easily

the greatest event in the world since the French Revolution and possibly since the

fall

Rome. The experiment

of

is

increasingly successful. Russia occupies

the center of the world’s attention today and as a state civilized nation, except the

United

it is

States, Spain, Portugal

recognized by every

and some countries

of South America.

The

challenge to the capitalistic form of industry and to the governments

more and more tremendous because of the present depression. If Socialism as a form of government and industry is on trial in Russia, capitalism as a form of industry and government is just as surely on trial throughout the world and is more and more clearly recognizing the fact. which

this

form dominates,

is

THE AMERICAN WORKER It

has always been

felt

that the United States

was an example of the extraordi-

nary success of capitalistic industry, and that this was proven by the high wage paid labor and the high standard of intelligence and comfort prevalent in this

many years, democratic political control of our governmasses of the people made it possible to envisage without

country. Moreover, for

ment by

the

violence any kind of reform in government or industry which appeared to the people. Recently, however, the people of the United States have begun to

recognize that their political power

From The

Crisis,

is

September 1931.

583

curtailed by organized capital in

Communism

Radical Thought; Socialism and

industry

and

democracy does not

that in this industry,

prevail;

and

that until

wider democracy does prevail in industry, democracy in government

is

seri-

ously curtailed and often quite ineffective. Also, because of recurring depressions the high

wage

in part illusory.

is

THE AMERICAN NECRO Moreover, there

in the

is

United States one

class of people

who more than any

other suffer under present conditions. Because of wholesale disfranchisement

and

a system of color caste, discriminatory legislation

ganda, 12,000,000 American Negroes have only a

freedom which the white Americans.

upon

minimum

of that curtailed

and influence on public opinion

right to vote

And

and widespread propa-

in industry

Negroes are

for historic

and

gives to

social reasons

the lowest round.

PROPOSED REFORM The

proposals to

range from

remedy the economic and

new legislation, better administration and government aid,

by the Republican and Democratic by Progressives, the Farmer-Labor the revolutionary proposals of the ists

America

political situation in

parties,

on

to liberal

movements

offered

fathered

movement and the Socialists, and finally to Communists. The Progressives and Social-

propose in general increased government ownership of land and natural

resources, state control of the larger public services taxation of

incomes and inheritance

of the rich.

The Communists, on

and such progressive

as shall decrease the

number and power

the other hand, propose an entire sweeping

away of the present organization of industry; the ownership of land, resources,

machines and

tools

by the

incomes which the Socialistic regime.

working

state,

the conducting of business by the state under

state limits.

And

in order to introduce this

Communists propose

class, as the

complete

a revolutionary dictatorship

by the

only sure, quick and effective path.

ADVICE TO NEGROES With these appeals

what

American Negro do? In the letters from United States Senators published in this issue oi The 'Crisis, we find, with all the sympathy and good-will expressed, a prevailing helplessness when it comes to advice on specific action. Reactionaries like Fess, Conservain his ears,

shall the

584

The Negro and Communism

Bulkley and Capper, Progressives

lives like

only

You have done

say:

salvation lies in patience as represented

worker

as a

by

Borah and Norris,

nothing that we can do

is

and further

Norman Thomas

all

effort

February

in the

help you, and your

to

on your own

can

many

could be expected; you suffer

as well as

present disadvantages; there

like

part.”

The

Socialist,

Negro

Crisis, invites the

to vote for the Socialist Party as the party of workers.

He

offers

the Negro no panacea for prejudice and caste but assumes that the uplift of the white worker will automatically emancipate the yellow, brown and black.

THE SCOTTSBORO CASES Finally, the Scottsboro cases

come and put new emphasis on

the appeal of the

Communists. Advocating the defense of the eight Alabama black boys, who without a shadow of doubt have been wrongly accused of crime, the Communot only asked to take charge of the defense of these victims, but they

nists

proceeded

to build

on

this case

Communist movement

as the

an appeal

to the

American Negro

only solution of their problem.

Immediately, these two objects bring two important problems;

Negroes with

their present

can the

first,

philosophy and leadership defend the Scottsboro

cases successfully? Secondly, even solve their

to join the

they can, will such defense help

if

them

to

problem of poverty and caste?

Communistic leadership in the United States had been broadminded and far-sighted, it would have acknowledged frankly that the honesty, earnestness and intelligence of the N.A.A.C.P. during twenty years of desperIf

the

ate struggle proved this organization

only one, and

and

its

methods the only methods

would have joined

it

Then beyond

that

and with Scottsboro to point

successful, will never solve the larger

more

be the

defend these boys

and laborers north and south, black and win freedom for victims threatened with judicial

Communists could have proceeded if

available, to

to

capitalists

white in every endeavor to

murder.

under present circumstances

as a

crimson and

terrible text.

out that legal defense alone, even

Negro problem but

that further

and

radical steps are needed.

COMMUNIST STRATEGY Unfortunately, American

sought

to

accomplish too

Communists

much

at

one

are neither wise nor intelligent. stroke.

They

tried to

prove

at

They

once

that

the N.A.A.C.P. did not wish to defend the victims at Scottsboro and that the

585

Radical Thought: Socialism and

Communism

reason for this was that Negro leadership in the N.A.A.C.P. was allied with the capitalists. tried to

The

accomplish

first it

of these two

eff^orts

was

silly

and the Communists

by deliberate lying and deception. They accused the

N.A.A.C.P. of stealing, misuse of funds, lack of interest in the Scottsboro cases,

cowardly surrender to malign forces, inefficiency and a policy of do-

nothing.

Now

whatever the N.A.A.C.P. has lacked,

it is

neither dishonest nor cow-

and already events are proving clearly that the only effective defense of the Scottsboro boys must follow that which has been carefully organized, engineered and paid for by the N.A.A.C.P., and that the success of this defense is helped so far as the Communists cooperate by hiring bourgeois lawyers and

ardly,

appealing to bourgeois judges; but

is

made

hindered and

doubtful by

considered and foolish tactics against the powers in whose hands the the Scottsboro victims If the

ill-

fate

lies.

Communists want these

lads

murdered, then

their tactics of threaten-

ing judges and yelling for mass action on the part of white southern workers calculated to insure

of

is

this.

And, on the other hand, lying and deliberate misrepresentation of friends who are fighting for the same ideals as the Communists, are old capitalistic, bourgeois weapons of which the exploit

at.

promoted

Camp it:

Hill

final

worthy of the Russian Black Hundreds, whoever

black sharecroppers, half-starved and desperate were organized

into a “Society for the

meet and

is

Communists ought to be ashamed. The

Advancement of Colored People” and then induced

protest against Scottsboro. Sheriff

imprisoned 34.

If this

and white

was instigated by Communists,

mob

it is

killed

to

one and

too despicable for

words; not because the plight of the black peons does not shriek for remedy

but because

this

is

herring across the

no time

trail

to bedevil a delicate situation

by drawing

a red

of eight innocent children.

Nevertheless, the N.A.A.C.P. will defend these 34 victims of Southern fear

and communist

The

irresponsibility.

ultimate object of the Communists, was naturally not merely nor

chiefly to save the boys accused at Scottsboro;

it

was

to

make

this case a

center

of agitation to expose the helpless condition of Negroes, and to prove that

anything

less

than the radical

Communist program could not emancipate

them.

THE NEGRO BOURGEOISIE The

question of the honesty and efficiency of the N.A.A.C.P. in the defense of

the Scottsboro boys, just as in a dozen other cases over the length and breadth

586

The Negro and Communism

of the United States,

Negro leadership

is

from the question

entirely separate

whether or not

communism

tending toward soeialism and

is

as to

or toward

capitalism.

The charge

Communists

of the

that the present set-up of Negro

that of the petit bourgeois minority

and surrendering

dominating

white profiteers

to

is

America

is

a helpless black proletariat,

The

simply a fantastic falsehood.

attempt to dominate Negro Americans by purely capitalistic ideas died with Booker T. Washington. The battle against it was begun by the Niagara

Movement and

Movement arose the N.A.A.C.P. Since that moment when the dominating leadership of the

out of the Niagara

time there has never been a

American Negro has been mainly capital or

by

Negro

dominated by wealth or

capitalistic ideals.

There are naturally some Negro landlords,

or even largely

some

capital

industrial leaders

is

not

owned

some

capitalists:

and some

some

investors; but the great

mass of

Negro

capital

or controlled by this group.

mainly of small individual savings invested

consists

large landowners,

in

homes, and

in insur-

ance, in lands for direct cultivation and individually used tools and machines.

Even the automobiles owned by Negroes represent

to a considerable

extent personal investments, designed to counteract the insult of the “Jhn

Crow” car. The Insurance business, which represents a large amount of Negro capital is for mutual co-operation rather than exploitation. Its profit is limited

done

and

its

methods directed by the

State.

Much

in small stores with small stocks of goods,

by side with one or two helpers, and makes

their office

— represent

equipment, and not

capitalists.

There

is

men — lawyers,

in

commercial

who

exploitation.

is

side

than a

physicians,

capital invested in their education

colored manufacturers of material labor. Nine-tenths of the hired

where the owner works

a personal profit less

normal American wage. Negro professional nurses and teachers

of the retail business

There

and

in

are few

speculate on the products of hired

Negro labor

is

under the control of white

probably no group of 12 million persons in the mod-

ern world which exhibits smaller contrasts in personal income than the

American Negro group. Their emancipation will not come, as among the Jews, from an internal readjustment and ousting of exploiters; rather it will

come from

a wholesale

emancipation from the grip of the white exploiters

without. It

is,

of course, always possible, with the ideals of America, that a

fledged capitalistic system

may develop

in the

full

Negro group; but the dominant

leadership of the Negro today, and particularly the leadership represented by the N.A.A.C.P. represents no such tendency. For h\'o generations the social leaders of the

depending

American Negro with very few exceptions have been poor men,

for

support on their

salaries,

587

owning

little

or

no

real property;

few

Communism

Radical Thought; Socialism and

have been business men, none have been exploiters, and while there have

been wide differences of ultimate

worked unselfishly

There

is

masses of Negro

for the uplift of the

no group of leaders on

on the whole, have

ideal these leaders

who have

earth

folk.

made common

so largely

cause with the lowest of their race as educated American Negroes, and

and

their foresight

sacrifice

and

it is

alone that has saved the American

theirs

freedman from annihilation and degradation. This

the class of leaders

is

who have

and organized and defended shortcomings and mistakes — and

directed

black folk in America and whatever their they are legion

can Negro

— their one great proof of success

as the

most

and

intelligent

fighting white civilization face to face

effective

and on

the survival of the Ameri-

is

group of colored people

own ground, on

its

the face of

the earth.

The

quintessence and final expression of this leadership

is

the N.A.A.C.P.

more desperate than any other race of modern times and it has fought with honesty and courage. It from Russia something better than a kick in the back from the young

For twenty years conflict

deserves

who

jackasses

it

has fought a battle

are leading

Communism

WHAT

America

in

THE

IS

The N.A.A.C.P. years ago laid down was to make 12 million Americans:

today.

N.A.A.C.P.

a clear

and

?

distinct

program.

Its

object

Physically free from peonage,

Mentally

free

from ignorance,

Politically free

from disfranchisement.

Socially free from insult.

Limited

as this platform

may seem

to perfectionists,

anything ever attempted before in America, that following.

On

this

platform

employers and laborers,

we have succeeded

capitalists

colored people, but on the other hand, enlisted the ful;

and

have

in uniting

is

given

down, we seek and welcome

588

white and black,

socialists

in

20 years of struggle,

rich, the

white and the power-

upon the

it.

advance of

and reformers, work come mainly from poor

we have

sympathy and co-operation of the

so long as this co-operation

laid

this

so far in

has gained an extraordinary

and communists,

and poor. The funds which support

rich

it

it is

On

we hand, we know

basis of the platform

the other

The Negro and Communism

perfectly well that the platform of the N.A.A.C.P. social reform.

beyond

its

It is

a

program

is

no complete program of

pragmatic union of certain definite problems, while lies

far

the whole question of the future of the darker races

and the economic emancipation of the working

classes.

WHITE LABOR Beyond the Scottsboro

and the

on Negro leadership, there still remains for Negroes and Communists, the pressing major question: How shall American Negroes be emancipated from economic slavery? In answer to this both Socialists and Communists attempted to show the Negro that his cases

slurs

That kind of talk to the American Throughout the history of the Negro in

interest lies with that of white labor.

Negro

is

like a red rag to a bull.

America, white labor has been the black man’s enemy, murderer. Mobs, to kill,

his oppressor, his red

and the discrimination of trade unions have been used harass and starve black men. White labor disfranchised Negro labor

in the South,

North, and

keeping them out of jobs and decent living quarters in the

is

is

riots

curtailing their education

and

and

civil

social

privileges

throughout the nation. White laborers have formed the backbone of the

Klux Klan and have furnished hands and ropes

to

Ku

lynch 3,560 Negroes since

1882.

Since the death of Terence Powderly not a single great white labor leader in the United States has wholeheartedly and honestly espoused the cause of justice to black workers. Socialists

and Communists explain

this easily:

white labor in

and poverty has been misled by the propaganda of white to divide labor into classes, races

is

There

is

and unions and

an immense amount of truth

capital,

ignorance

whose policy

one against the

pit

standards, race pride, competition for jobs,

all

But white American Laborers are not

And with few exceptions

to set

other.

Newspapers, social

in this explanation:

work

its

white against black.

more intelligent they are, the higher they rise, the more efficient they become, the more determined they are to keep Negroes under their heels. It is no mere fools.

coincidence that Labors present representative

the

in the President’s

cabinet

belongs to a union that will not admit a Negro, and himself was for years active in

West Virginia

in driving

Negroes out of decent

jobs.

labor that today keeps Negroes out of the trades, refuses live in

for in

a

and helps as a

intelligent white

them decent homes to

nullify their vote. Wliatever ideals white labor today strives

would surrender nearly every one before man.

America,

Negro

It is

it

589

it

would recognize

Radical Thought: Socialism and

Communism

COMMUNISTS AND THE COLOR LINE The American Communists have made a courageous fight against the color line among the workers. They have solicited and admitted Negro members. They have insisted in their strikes and agitation to let Negroes fight with them and

that the object of their fighting

is

for black

workers as well as white

workers. But in this they have gone dead against the thought and desire of the

overwhelming mass of white workers, and face today a dead blank wall even their

own

in

school in Arkansas. Thereupon instead of acknowledging defeat in

make white

their effort to

labor abolish the color line, they turn and accuse

Negroes of not sympathizing with the Socialists

ideals of Labor!

have been franker. They learned that American labor would not

Negro and they very calmly unloaded him. They allude to him vaguely and as an afterthought in their books and platforms. The American Socialist party is out to emancipate the white worker and if this does not carry the

The only time Norman Thomas becomes

automatically free the colored man, he can continue in slavery. that so fine a

man and

vague and incoherent

he touches him

When,

as

when he touches

seldom

therefore,

refuse to lay

to “Nigger”-hating

understand exactly the reasons in pointing out to

the black

man, and consequently

as possible.

Negro leaders

and action

their brains

is

so logical a reasoner as

for this

down arms and surrender

white workers, liberals and socialists

and spend what energy they can spare

white workers the necessity of recognizing Negroes. But the

Communists, younger and newer,

largely of foreign extraction,

and thus

discounting the hell of American prejudice, easily are led to blame the

Negroes and

to try to explain the intolerable

American

of an imported Marxist pattern, which does not at

For instance, from

Camp

all fit

on the

basis

the situation.

Moscow comes this statement to explain

Scottsboro and

Hill:

“Again, as in the case of Sacco

and

Vanzetti, the

attempting

to

through

criminal provocation to the very end.’’

This

its is

error into

may

situation

fall.

go against proletarian social opinion.

a ludicrous

It is

attempting

misapprehension of local conditions and

which long distance

The

American Bourgeoisie

interpretation,

unsupported by

is

to carry

illustrates the

real

knowledge,

Sacco- Vanzetti cases in Massachusetts represented the fight of

prejudiced, entrenched capital against racial propaganda; but in Jackson

County, northeastern Alabama, where Scottsboro

is

33,000 Native whites and

The

less

than 3,000 Negroes.

590

situated, there are over vast majority of these

The Negro and Communism

whites belong to the laboring class and they formed the white proletarian

which

is

determined

demand the

Negro boys. Such mobs of white workers “niggers” whenever their passions, especially in sexual

to kill the eight

right to kill

matters, are inflamed by propaganda.

blood

lust

when

it

but

as

The

capitalists are willing to

interferes with their profits.

innocent black boys

mob

will hurt

curb

this

They know' that the murder of 8

organized industry and government in Alabama;

long as 10,000 armed white workers

demand

these victims they do not

dare move. Into this delicate and contradictory situation, the Communists hurl themselves and pretend to speak for the workers.

They not only do not

speak for the white workers but they even intensify the blind prejudices of

and leave the Negro workers helpless on the one hand and the white capitalists scared to death on the other. these lynchers

The

persons

who

are killing blacks in

blood sacrifice are the white workers artisans.

The

Northern Alabama and demanding

— sharecroppers,

trade unionists

mob-law and violence and would

capitalists are against

and

listen to

reason and justice in the long run because industrial peace increases their profits.

On

‘‘Niggers.”

the other hand, the white workers want to

kill

the competition of

Thereupon, the Communists, seizing leadership of the poorest and

most ignorant blacks head them toward inevitable slaughter and

jail-slavery,

while they hide safely in Chattanooga and Harlem.

American Negroes do not propose

to

be the shock troops of the Communist

Revolution, driven out in front to death, cruelty and humiliation in order to

win

victories for white workers.

They

are picking

no chestnuts from the

fire,

neither for capital nor white labor.

Negroes know perfectly well that whenever they America, the nation

There

is

one

will unite as

no conceivable idea

that

seems

fist

to

try to

lead revolution in

crush them and them alone.

to the present

overwhelming majority

of Americans higher than keeping Negroes “in their place.”

Negroes perceive clearly that the

real interests of the

white worker are

identical with the interests of the black worker; but until the white worker

recognizes

be

made

this,

the black worker

is

compelled

in sheer self-defense to refuse to

the sacrificial goat.

THE NEGRO AND THE RICH The remaining grain

of truth in the

Communist attack on Negro

leadership

is

the well-known fact that American wealth has helped the American Negro

Negro could not have attained his present advancement. American courts from the Supreme Court down are domiand

that without this help the

591

Radical Thought: Socialism and

Communism

nated by wealth and Big Business, yet they are today the Negro's only protee-

eomplete disfranchisement, segregation and the abolition of

tion against

publie schools. Higher edueation for Negroes

is

the

of the Standard Oil,

gift

the Power Trust, the Steel Trust and the Mail Order

his

Chain

Stores, together

with the aristoeratie Christian Chureh; but these have given Negroes 40,000 blaek leaders to fight white folk on their

Big industry in the

10 years has

last

own

and

level

in their

opened oeeupations

own

language.

for a million

Negro

we would have starved in jails and gutters. and Communists may sneer and say that the eapitalists sought

workers, without whieh Soeialists

all this profit,

eheap

reactionary leaders.

knowledge

to stave off

refused the

did.

But Negroes sought food, elothes, shelter and

death and slavery and only

damned

fools

would have

gift.

Moreover, we

beeome

and the training of eonservative,

labor, strike-breakers

They

in

who

reeeive edueation as the dole of the rieh have not

all

slaves of wealth.

Meanwhile, what have white workers and radical reformers done for Negroes? By strikes and agitation, by self-denial and saerifiee, they have raised wages and bettered working eonditions; but they did this for themselves and only shared their gains with Negroes

freedom,

politieal

power,

when

manhood

they had

rights

and

when nobody objeeted; but for ''white people it.

White labor segregated Dr. Sweet

Arkansas peons; white laborers

only”

to

white labor but

it is

not

all,

when anybody demanded white laborers ehased the

blaek ehildrens sehool funds in

South Carolina, white laborers lyneh Negroes

mueh

They have preaehed

soeial uplift for everybody,

in Detroit;

steal the

to.

or mostly,

in

on the

Alabama. Negroes owe eredit side of the ledger.

THE NEXT STEP Where does

this leave the

Negro? As a praetieal program,

it

leaves

him

just

where he was before the Russian Revolution; sympathetie with Russia and hopeful for

its

ultimate sueeess in establishing a Soeialistie state; sympathetie

with the efforts of the Ameriean workingman to establish demoeratie eontrol of industry in this land; absolutely eertain that as a laborer his interests are the

but nevertheless fighting doggedly on the old battleground, led by the N.A.A.C.P. to make the Negro laborer a laborer on equal interests of all labor;

soeial footing with the white laborer: to political vote,

and

notwithstanding the faet that

less to all voters; to

American

maintain the Negros right to a this vote

vindicate in the courts the

means inereasingly less Negros eivil rights and

though he knows how the eourts are prostituted the power of wealth; and above all, determined by plain talk and agitation citizenship, even

592

to to

The Negro and Communism

show the

intolerable injustice with

which America and the world

colored peoples and to continue to

workers of Europe and America are capital;

and

the white

insist that in this injustice,

just as

treats the

culpable as the white owners of

that these workers can gain black

men as allies only and

insofar as

they frankly, fairly and completely abolish the Color Line. Present organization of industry for private profit

by concentrated wealth civilization survives. slavery^

and

is

doomed

to disaster.

The foundation of

its

control of government

must change and

present world-wide power

semi-slavery of the colored world including the

Until the colored man, yellow, red, brown, intelligent

It

and

and

and

black,

fall if is

the

American Negroes.

becomes

free, articulate,

the receiver of a decent income, white capital will use the profit

derived from his degradation to keep white labor in chains.

There

is

no doubt, then,

American Negroes

lie.

as to the future, or as to

There

is

no doubt,

too,

where the true

but that the

emancipation of colored labor must come from white

593

first

labor.

interests of

step toward the

The Black Worker How black men, coming to America teenth, eighteenth tral

centuries,

became

a cen-

thread in the history of the United States, at once a

challenge to its

and nineteenth

in the sixteenth, seven-

economic

its

democracy and always an important

history

and

to free four million black slaves in forty years of bitter controversy,

development

social

Easily the most dramatic episode in

American

an

and

part of

history

was the sudden move

effort to stop a great civil war, to

to

appease the moral sense of

end

civili-

zation.

From

anomaly of slavery plagued a nation which asserted the equality of all men, and sought to derive powers of government from the consent of the governed. Within sound of the voices of those who said this lived more than half a million black slaves, forming nearly one-fifth of the day of

the population of a

The

its

birth, the

new

nation.

black population at the time of the

quarters of a million,

and there were over

first

census had risen to three-

a million at the

beginning of the

nineteenth century. Before 1830, the blacks had passed the two million mark,

helped by the increased importations gling

up

until

1820.

By

their

own

just

before 1808, and the

illicit

reproduction, the Negroes reached

3,638,808 in 1850, and before the Civil War, stood at 4,441,830.

10%

of the whole population of the nation in 1700,

1800 and

1

1.6%

860, at least

well as

18.9%

in

all slaves.

In

in 1750,

all

90% were born

black and not

in the

United

all

Africans and not

States,

1

3% were visibly of white

as

Negro descent and actually more than one-fourth were probably of

From Black in the

22%

They were

in 1900.

These workers were not 1

smug-

Reconstruction in America:

Attempt

to

An

Essay Toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played

Reconstruct Democracy in America, 1860-1880 (1935).

594

The Black Worker

white, Indian and

Negro blood.

11%

In 1860,

of these dark folk were free

workers. In origin, the slaves represented everything African, although

themoriginated on or near the West Coast. Yet

Bantu

great

tribes

from Sierra Leone

to

most of

among them appeared

South Africa;

tlie

the

Sudanese, straight

across the center of the continent, from the Atlantic to the Valley of the Nile;

the Nilotic Negroes and the black and tribes

these,

brown Hamites, allied with Egypt; the of the great lakes; the Pygmies and the Hottentots; and in addition to distinct traces of both Berber and Arab blood. There is no doubt of the

presence of

all

these various elements in the mass of 10,000,000 or

Negroes transported from Africa

to the various

more

Americas, from the fifteenth to

the nineteenth centuries.

Most of them that came to the continent went through West Indian tutelage, and thus finally appeared in the United States. They brought with them their religion and rhythmic song, and some traces of their art and tribal customs.

And

a settled

working population, speaking English or French, professing Chris-

after a lapse of two

and used principally

tianity,

and one-half centuries, the Negroes became

in agricultural toil.

Moreover, they so mingled

blood with white and red America that today

their

less

25%

than

of the Negro

Americans are of unmixed African descent.

So long

as slavery

was a matter of race and color,

the nation uneasy and continually affronted

its

it

ideals.

made the conscience of The men who wrote the

Constitution sought by every evasion, and almost by subterfuge, to keep

new government. They

recognition of slavery out of the basic form of the

founded

their

hopes on the prohibition of the slave

without continual additions from abroad, survive,

and thus the problem of

this tropical

slavery

trade,

being sure that

people would not long

would disappear

in death.

miscalculated, or did not foresee the changing economic world.

more

cheap Africans; but slave

West Indies

profitable in the'

and

in

to kill the slaves

America without

by overwork and import

a slave trade,

it

paid to conserve the

him multiply. When, therefore, manifestly the Negroes were not there came quite naturally new excuses and explanations. It was a

matter of social condition. Cradually these people would be

could only

come

to the

and country, since the in a rich

free;

but freedom

bulk as the freed were transplanted to their living together of black

unthinkable. So again the nation waited, and

and

might be

let

dying out,

But

It

They

and white

its

in

own

land

America was

conscience sank

to sleep.

and eager land, wealth and work multiplied. They twisted new

intricate patterns

around the

earth. Slowly but mightily these black

workers were integrated into modern industry.

On

free

and

fertile

land Ameri-

cans raised, not simply sugar as a cheap sweetening, rice for food and tobacco as a

new and

tickling luxury; but they

began

595

to

grow

a fiber that clothed the

Communism

Radical Thought: Socialism and

masses of a ragged world. Cotton grew so swiftly that the 9,000 bales of cotton

which the new nation scarcely noticed in 1791 became 79,000 in 1800; and with this increase, walked economic revolution in a dozen different lines. The cotton crop reached one-half million bales in 1822, a million bales in 1831,

two million at the

then enormous

Such

and

in 1840, three million in 1852,

and

facts

were related

as

total of five

million bales.

coupled with the increase of the slaves

others,

in

to

which they

meant a new world; and all the more so American cotton and Negro slaves, came both by

both cause and

because with increase

in the year of secession, stood

effect,

chance and ingenuity new miracles

manufacturing, and particularly for

for

the spinning and weaving of cloth.

The

giant forces of water

do the world s the bottom of a growing

and of steam were harnessed

work, and the black workers of America bent

at

to

pyramid of commerce and industry; and they not only could not be spared,

if

new economic organization was to expand, but rather they became the cause of new political demands and alignments, of new dreams of power and this

visions of empire. First of all, their soil

work called

widening stretches of new,

for

rich, black

— in Florida, in Louisiana, in Mexico; even in Kansas. This land, added to

cheap that a

labor,

and labor

and

easily regulated

whole system of culture arose

philosophy. Black labor

became

made profits so high a new leisure and social

distributed,

in the South, with

the foundation stone not only of the South-

commerce, of the English factory system, of European commerce, of buying and selling on a world-wide scale; new cities were built on the results of black labor, and a new labor problem, involving all white labor, arose both in Europe and America. Thus, the old difficulties and paradoxes appeared in new dress. It became ern social structure, but of Northern manufacture and

men were not men

easy to say and easier to prove that these black that white

slavery

was

men

were, and could never be, in the same sense, free. Their

a matter of

both race and social condition, but the condition was

limited and determined by race.

be well-treated and cared land. As the

in the sense

Richmond,

for,

They were

but

Virginia,

far

congenital wards and children, to

happier and safer here than in their

Examiner put

it

own

in 1854:

“Let us not bother our brains about what Providence intends to do with our

Negroes

in the distant future,

has done for

them

our plantations.

home; and

if

.

.

but glory in and profit to the utmost by what

in transplanting .

them

True philanthropy

Southern

men would

is

our property, and ours forever;

to the

act as

inscribed with a covenant, in letters of forever;

here,

.

596

.

setting

them

Negro, begins,

if

to

work on

like charity, at

the canopy of heaven were

and here they would accomplish more good

fire, .

and

He

that the

Negro

is

here,

The Black Worker

for the race in five years than they boast the institution itself to

plished in two centuries.

On

.

have accom-

.

the other hand, the growing exploitation of white labor in Europe, the

of the factory system, the increased

monopoly of land, and the problem of the distribution of political power, began to send wave after wave of immigrants to America, looking for new freedom, new opportunity and new democracy. The opportunity for real and new democracy in America was broad. Political power at first was, as usual, confined to property holders and an aristocracy of birth and learning. But it was never securely based on land. Land was free and both land and property were possible to nearly every thrifty worker. Schools began early to multiply and open their doors even to the poor laborer. Birth began to count for less and less and America became to the world a land of economic opportunity. So the world came to America, even before the Revolution, and afterwards during the nineteenth century, ninerise

teen million immigrants entered the United States.

When we compare

these figures with the cotton crop and the increase of

we see how the economic problem increased in intricacy. This shown by the persons in the drama and their differing and

black workers, intricacy

is

opposing

interests.

There were the native-born Americans,

largely of English

who were the property holders and employers; and even so far as they were poor, they looked forward to the time when they would accumulate capital and become, as they put it, economically '‘independent." Then there were the new immigrants, torn with a certain violence from their older social and economic surroundings; strangers in a new land, with visions of rising in descent,

the social and

and

economic world by means of labor. They

social status, varying

German and free in

some

from the half-starved

Irish

differed in language

peasant to the educated

English artisan. There were the free Negroes: those of the North cases for'

many

generations, and voters; and in other cases,

new come from the South, with little skill and small knowledge of and labor in their new environment. There were the free Negroes of the

fugitives, life

South, an unstable, harried will of

class, living

white patrons, and yet rising

to

on sufferance of the

law,

and the good

be workers and sometimes owners of

property and even of slaves, and cultured citizens. There was the great mass of

poor whites, disinherited of their economic portion by competition with the slave system,

and land monopoly.

In the earlier history of the South, free

Indeed, so

far as the letter

Southern colony property,

in

which

Negroes had the

right to vote.

of the law was concerned, there was not a single a black

man who owned

the requisite

amount of

and complied with other conditions, did not at some period have the

legal right to vote.

597

Radical Thought: Socialism and

Negroes voted

no

free

in Virginia as late as 1723,

Communism

when

the assembly enaeted that

Negro, mulatto or Indian “shall hereafter have any vote

at the eleetions

of burgesses or any election whatsoever.” In North Carolina, by the Act of

1734, a former discrimination against Negro voters was laid aside and not

reenacted until 1835.

A complaint

in

South Carolina,

in 1701, said:

“Several free Negroes were receiv’d,

Freeholders in the Province. So that

& taken for as good Electors as the best

we

leave

it

with Your Lordships to judge

whether admitting Aliens, Strangers, Servants, Negroes, qualified Voters, can be thought

any ways agreeable

to

(Vc, as

good and

King Charles’ Patent

Your Lordships, or the English Constitution of Covernment.” Again Jews and Negroes, there was at

first

who had been

voting,

to

in 1716,

were expressly excluded. In Ceorgia,

no color discrimination, although only owners of fifty acres of

land could vote. In 1761, voting was expressly confined to white men.^ In the states carved out of the Southwest, they were disfranchised as soon as

the state

came

into the

Union, although

and 1799, and Tennessee allowed

free

in

Kentucky they voted between

Negroes

to vote in

1

792

her constitution of

1796.

where even disfranchisement,

In North Carolina,

in 1835, did

not apply to

who already had the right to vote, it was said that the several hundred Negroes who had been voting before then usually voted prudently and judiNegroes

ciously.

In Delaware

and Maryland they voted

century. In Louisiana, Negroes status

in the latter part of the eighteenth

who had had the

right to vote

during

territorial

were not disfranchised.

To sum up,

Negro was excluded from the suffrage only in Ceorgia, South Carolina and Virginia. In the Border States, Delaware disfranchised the Negro in 1792; Maryland in 1783 and 1810. in colonial times, the free

In the Southeast, Florida disfranchised

west, Louisiana disfranchised

them

Negroes

in 1845;

and

in the South-

in 1812; Mississippi in 1817;

Alabama

in

1819; Missouri, 1821; Arkansas in 1836; Texas, 1845. Ceorgia in her constitution of

1777 confined voters

constitutions of 1789

As slavery grew

to

white males; but

was omitted

in the

and 1798.

to a

system and the Cotton

imperial white domination, a free

menace. As

this

a thief and a

Negro was

Kingdom began

to

expand

a contradiction, a threat

vagabond, he threatened society; but

as

into

and

a

an educated

property holder, a successful mechanic or even professional

than threatened slavery.

He must he said

He

contradicted and undermined

suppressed, enslaved, colonized.

about him that did not easily appear

In the North, Negroes, for the

most

598

it.

And nothing

man, he more He must not be.

so

bad could be

as true to slaveholders.

part, received political enfranchise-

The Black Worker

merit with the white laboring classes. In

word

tion twice refused to insert the

and immunities of

778, the Congress of the Confedera-

‘‘white” in the Articles of

in asserting that free inhabitants in

privileges

1

each

state

Confederation

should be entitled to

the

all

free citizens of the several states. In the law of

1783, free Negroes were recognized as a basis of taxation, and in 1784, they

were recognized

as voters in the territories. In the

1787, “free male inhabitants of

The few Negroes vote

if

that

were

full

in

Northwest Ordinance of

age” were recognized as voters.

Maine,

New Hampshire and Vermont could

they had the property qualifications. In Connecticut they were

dis-

franchised in 1814; in 1865 this restriction was retained, and Negroes did not regain the right until after the Civil War. In

New

Jersey, they

franchised in 1807, but regained the right in 1820 and lost

Negroes voted

New

in

York

in

it

were

dis-

again in 1847.

the eighteenth century, then were dis-

franchised, but in 1821 were permitted to vote with a discriminatory property qualification of $250.

tempts were

removed tion

made

No

property qualification was required of whites. At-

at various

until 1870. In

times to remove this qualification but

Rhode

it

was not

Island they were disfranchised in the constitu-

which followed Dorr’s Rebellion, but

finally

allowed to vote in 1842. In

when

Pennsylvania, they were allowed to vote until 1838

the “reform” con-

vention restricted the suffrage to whites.

The Western

States as territories did not usually restrict the suffrage, but as

they were admitted to the Union they disfranchised the Negroes:

Ohio

in

1803; Indiana in 1816; Illinois in 1818; Michigan in 1837; Iowa in 1846;

Wisconsin

in 1848;

Minnesota

in 1858;

The Northwest Ordinance and even

and Kansas

in 1861.

the Louisiana Purchase had

made no

color discrimination in legal and political rights. But the states admitted from this territory, specifically

and from the

first,

denied free black

men

the right to

vote and passed codes of black laws in Ohio, Indiana and elsewhere, instigated largely

Thus,

by the attitude and at first, in

narrow and

fears of the

immigrant poor whites from the South.

Kansas and the West, the problem of the black worker was

specific.

Neither the North nor the West asked that black labor in

the United States be free and enfranchised. slave labor as a fact; but they restricted,

the contrary, they accepted

were determined that

and should not compete with

What was

On

free

it

should be

territorially

white labor.

system for which the South fought and risked

life,

reputation and wealth and which a growing element in the North viewed

first

this industrial

with hesitating tolerance, then with distaste and finally with economic fear

and moral horror? What did today.

We

mean

to

think of oppression beyond

whipping and contrary,

it

be

all

a slave?

hard to imagine

it

conception; cruelty, degradation,

starvation, the absolute negation of

we may

It is

human

rights; or

on the

think of the ordinary worker the world over today, slaving

599

Radical Thought; Socialism and

ten, hv^lve, or fourteen

Communism

hours a day, with not enough to

eat,

compelled by

physical necessities to do this'and not to do that, curtailed in his

and

and we

his possibilities;

slavery

is

say, here, too,

is

his

movements

a slave called a “free worker,”

and

merely a matter of name.

But there was

we may

1863 a real meaning to slavery different from that

in

apply to the laborer today.

was

It

in part psychological, the

enforced personal

feeling of inferiority, the calling of another Master; the standing with hat in

hand. the

was the helplessness.

It

submergence below the

It

was the defenselessness of family

arbitrary will of

without doubt worse in these

vital respects

any

life. It

sort of individual.

than that which

exists

It

was

was

today in

Europe or America. Its analogue today is the yellow, brown and black laborer in China and India, in Africa, in the forests of the Amazon; and it was this slavery that

The

fell in

slavery of

America.

Negroes

and oppressive system. the other hand,

it is

It

in the

did not

South was not usually a deliberately cruel

mean

just as difficult to

conceive as quite true the

of a patriarchal state with cultured and

were

as children,

mental training

as

systematic starvation or murder.

humane

was

for their

idyllic picture

whom

masters under

guided and trained in work and

On

play, given

slaves

even such

good, and' for the well-being of the surround-

ing world.

The

victims of Southern slavery were often happy; had usually adequate

food for their health, and shelter sufficient for a mild climate. erners could say with

some

justification that

when

hands were compared with the worst class of laborers

The

South-

the mass of their field

in the

slums of New York

and Philadelphia, and the factory towns of New England, the black were as well off and in some particulars better off. Slaves lived largely country where health conditions were better; they worked in the open their hours

They

were about the current hours

for peasants

slaves in the

air,

and

throughout Europe.

received no formal education, and neither did the Irish peasant, the

English factory-laborer, nor the

German Bauer; and

in contrast with these free

white laborers, the Negroes were protected by a certain primitive sort of oldage pension, job insurance, and sickness insurance; that

supported in some fashion,

when

is,

they were too old to work; they must have

attention in sickness, for they represented invested capital;

never be

On

among

and they could

the unemployed.

the other hand,

it

is

just as true that

sented the worst and lowest conditions is

they must be

Negro

slaves in

among modern

America repre-

laborers.

One

estimate

maintenance of a slave in the South cost the master about $19 a which means that they were among the poorest paid laborers in the

that the

year,

modern

world.

They

represented in a very real sense the ultimate degradation

of man. Indeed, the system was so reactionary, so utterly inconsistent with

600

The Black Worker

modern

progress, that

we simply cannot

degraded the factory hand, he slave’s position

is

was precisely this;

grasp

not real estate.

it

today.

The

No

matter

how

tragedy of the black

his absolute subjection to the individual will

of an owner and to “the cruelty and injustice which are the invariable

consequences of the exercise of irresponsible power, especially where authority must be sometimes delegated by the planter to agents of inferior education

and coarser

feelings.”

The proof

of this

lies clearly

written in the slave codes. Slaves were not

They had no right of petition. They were “devisable like any They could own nothing; they could make no contracts; they

considered men. other chattel.”

could hold no property, nor

traffic in

property; they could not hire out; they

could not legally marry nor constitute families; they could not control their children; they could not appeal from their master; they could be punished at

They could not

will.

testify in court;

they could be imprisoned by their

owners, and the criminal offense of assault and battery could not be committed

on the person of a

a slave

slave.

The “willful, malicious and deliberate murder” of

was punishable by death, but such a crime was practically impossible

of proof.

The

slave

owed

to his

master and

all his

family a respect “without

bounds, and an absolute obedience.” This authority could be transmitted to others. to

A slave

could not sue his master; had no right of redemption; no right

education or religion; a promise

nor

could have no access

Looking

to a slave

by

his master

had no force

Children followed the condition of the slave mother. The slave

validity.

for striking

made

to the judiciary.

A slave

might be condemned

to death

any white person. at these

accounts,

slave, so far as his civil status

is

“it is safe to

Negro

concerned, purely and absolutely property,

be bought and sold and pass and descend

The whole

say that the law regards a

legal status of slavery

as a tract of land, a horse, or

was enunciated

an

to

ox.”^

in the extraordinary

statement of a Chief Justice of the United States that Negroes had always been regarded in America “as having no rights which a white

man was bound

to

respect.” It

may be

said with truth that the law

was often harsher than the practice.

Nevertheless, these laws and decisions represent the legally permissible possibilities,

and the only curb upon the power of the master was

his sense of

humanity and decency, on the one hand, and the conserving of

ment on

the other.

there can be

And

Of the humanity

no doubt.

In

some

of large

upon

their ability to care for large

necessity of entrusting the care of the slaves to

other hands than their own, led to

The

numbers of Southern masters

cases, they gave their slaves a fatherly care.

yet even in such cases the strain

numbers of people and the

his invest-

much

suffering

and

cruelty.

matter of his investment in land and slaves greatly curtailed the

601

Communism

Radical Thought: Socialism and

Under

owner's freedom of action.

the competition of growing industrial

organization, the slave system*was indeed the source of

owner and landlord

for the slave

to

keep

a large or

immense

profits.

But

even reasonable share of

The price of the slave produce in the open market could be hammered down by merchants and traders acting with knowledge and collusion. And the slave owner was, therefore, continually these profits was increasingly difficult.

forced to find his profit not in the high price of cotton and sugar, but in

beating even further

owners it

down

the cost of his slave labor. This

in early days kill the slave

made

the slave

by overwork and renew their working stock;

led to the widely organized interstate slave trade betw^een the Border States

and the Cotton Kingdom of the Southern South; breaking up of families, and lust

it

it

led to neglect

and the

could not protect the slave against the cruelty,

and neglect of certain owners.

Thus human

slavery in the

South pointed and led

contradictory and paradoxical directions

human blood. The

in

two singularly

— toward the deliberate commercial

breeding and sale of

labor for profit and tow^ard the intermingling of

black and white

slaveholders shrank from acknowledging either

set of facts

but they were clear and undeniable.

from

In this vital respect, the slave laborer differed

could be sold; he could, a

all

others of his day: he

of a single individual, be transferred for

at the will

life

thousand miles or more. His family, wife and children could be legally and

absolutely taken from him. Free laborers today are compelled to

wander

in

search for work and food; their families are deserted for want of w ages; but in there

all this

is

no such

tion of control over

direct barter in

men beyond

human

flesh. It w^as a

modern

the

sharp accentua-

labor reserve or the contract

coolie system.

Negroes could be sold — actually sold

to calves or bulls, or recognition of family.

South was properly ashamed of denied States

it.

But

were

it

filled

was

a stark

and

it

we

as It

sell cattle

was

with advertisements:

— “I

The

a nasty business.

and continually

bitter fact.

with no reference

belittled

white

and almost

Southern papers of the Border

wish to purchase

both sexes from 6 to 30 years of age for wTich

I

w'ill

fift}^

Negroes of

give the highest cash

prices.”

“Wanted

to

purchase

The consequent

— Negroes of every description, age and sex.”

disruption of families

is

proven beyond doubt:

— Ran away from the subscriber, a Negro girl, named Maria. She of a copper color, between 3 and 14 years of age — bareheaded and barefooted. She small for her age — very sprightly and very likely. She “Fifty Dollars reward. is

1

is

stated she

was going

to see

her mother at Maysville. Sanford Tomson.”

“Committed to jail of Madison County, a Negro w^oman, who calls her name Fanny, and says she belongs to William Miller, of Mobile. She formerly

602

The Black Worker

belonged

to

John Givins, of this county, who now owns several of her children.

David Shropshire,

Jailer.”

Dollar reward.

“Fift\'

Pauladore,

commonly

— Ran

away from the subscriber,

called Paul.

I

plantation at Goosecreek, where, Davis.”

One

Hayne has purand has them on his

understand Gen. R.

chased his wife and children from H. L. Pinckney, Esq.,

no doubt, the fellow

can see Pauladore “lurking” about

is

his wife

Negro man

his

Y.

frequently lurking.

T’.

and children.^

The system of slavery demanded a special police force and such a force was made possible and unusually effective by the presence of the poor whites. This explains the difference between the slave revolts in the West Indies, and the lack of effective revolt in the Southern United States. In the

power over the Negroes

slave

as they

Indies, the

was held by the whites and carried out by them and such

could

the South, on the other hand, the great planters

trust. In

formed proportionately quite at their

West

command some

as small a class

five million

but they had singularly enough

poor whites; that

is,

there, were actually

more white people to police the slaves than there were slaves. Gonsidering the economic rivalry of the black and white worker in the North, it would have seemed natural that the poor white would have refused to police the slaves. But two considerations led him in the opposite direction. First of all, it gave him work and some authority as overseer, slave driver, and member of the patrol system.

him

this,

it

fed his vanity because

it

associated

with the masters. Slavery bred in the poor white a dislike of Negro

sorts.

all

But above and beyond

He

toil

of

never regarded himself as a laborer, or as part of any labor

movement. If he had any ambition at all it was to become a planter and to own “niggers.” To these Negroes he transferred all the dislike and hatred which he had for the whole slave system. The result was that the system was held stable and intact by the poor white. Even with the late ruin of Haiti before their eyes, the planters, stirred as they were, were nevertheless able to stamp out slave revolt.

The dozen

revolts of the eighteenth century

had dwindled

to the plot of

Gabriel in 1800, Vesey in 1822, of Nat Turner in 1831 and crews of the

Amistad and Creole

in

1839 and 1841. Gradually the whole white South

became an armed and commissioned camp kill

to

keep Negroes

in slavery

and

to

the black rebel.

But even the poor white, led by the planter, would not have kept the black slave in nearly so

complete control had

and

Safety Valve of Slavery;

determined slave had

Under

to

that

run away

the situation as

it

it

not been for what

may be

was the chance which

to

called the

a vigorous

and

freedom.

developed between 1830 and 1860 there were

grave losses to the capital invested in black workers. Encouraged by the

idealism of those Northern thinkers

who

insisted that

Negroes were human,

the black worker sought freedom by running away from slavery.

603

The

physical

Radical Thought: Socialism and

geography of America with

its

Communism

paths north, by swamp, river and mountain

Henson and Tubman; and the extra-legal efforts of abolitionists made this more and more easy. One cannot know the real facts concerning the number of fugitives, but despite the fear of advertising the losses, the emphasis put upon fugitive slaves by the South shows that it was an important economic item. It is certain from range; the daring of black revolutionists like

the bitter effort to increase the efficiency of the fugitive slave law that the losses

from runaways were widespread and continuous; and the increase interstate slave trade

from Border States

to the

in the

deep South, together with the

showed a growing pressure. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, one bought an average slave for $200; while in 1860 increase in the price of slaves,

the price ranged from $1,400 to $2,000.

Not only was the

important because of the actual

fugitive slave

volved, but for potentialities in the future.

These

free

loss in-

Negroes were furnishing

mass of the black workers, and especially they were

a leadership for the

furnishing a text for the abolition idealists. Fugitive slaves, like Frederick

Douglass and others humbler and

by thousands and spelled the

tionists

The

What were

number

to

of aboli-

of slavery.

whole

lay in the ultimate relation of slaves to

social

democracy.

be the limits of democratic control in the United States?

became

labor, black as well as white,

free

If all

— were given schools and the right

— what control could or should be set to the power and action of these Was

laborers? to rule

doom

increased the

true significance of slavery in the United States to the

development of America

to vote

less gifted,

the rule of the mass of Americans to be unlimited, and the right

extended

to all

men

regardless of race

of dictatorship and control; and tected? This was the great

men who

how would

and

color, or

if

not,

what power

property and privilege be pro-

and primary question which was

in the

minds of the

wrote the Constitution of the United States and continued in the

minds of thinkers down through the the world as the problem of

slavery controversy.

It still

democracy expands and touches

remains with all

races

and

nations.

And and

of all

human development, ancient and modern,

significant

is

the philosophy of

souls of black folk. In

most respects

and action which

life

its

not the least singular slavery bred in the

expression was stilted and confused; the

Hebrew prophecy and biblical legend furnished inaccurate words. The subtle folk-lore of Africa, with whimsy and parable,

rolling periods of

but splendid veiled wish

and wisdom; and above

music, the only

Beneath the

gift

Nothing

the anointing chrism of the slave

of pure art in America.

Veil lay right

throwing aside the

all fell

veil, a

and wrong, vengeance and

soul of sweet Beauty

else of art or religion did the slave

604

love,

and sometimes

and Truth stood revealed.

South give

to the world,

except the

The Black Worker

Negro song and little

to this gift.

story.

One

And even

has but to

after slavery,

down to our day,

remember as symbol of it all,

petty artisans, the legend of John Henry, the mighty black,

working against the machine, and died “with

Up

from

modern

more

became

unspoiled by

in His

his heart

Hand.” clearer,

aim long before the emancipation of cooperation with the Abolition movement.

definite

1863. His greatest effort lay in his

He knew he was

still

climbed the Free Negro with

this slavery gradually

expression and

has added but

who broke

Hammer

his

it

not free until

Negroes were

all

exhibits of the possibilities of the

Negro

Individual Negroes

free.

race,

once

if

it

was raised

Even when, as so often, the Negro became Court the ignorant American mob, he made his plea in his songs and antics.

above the Jester to

status of slavery.

Thus spoke

“the noblest slave that ever

God

set free,”

Frederick Douglass

in 1852, in his 4th of July oration at Rochester, voicing the frank

and

fearless

criticism of the black worker:

“What,

to the

American

reveals to

him, more than

cruelty to

which he

your boasted vanity;

slave,

all

your 4th of July?

is

other days in the year, the gross injustice and

the constant victim.

is

answer: a day that

I

To him your celebration

is

a

sham;

an unholy license; your national greatness, swelling

liberty,

your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless; your denunciation of

tyrants, brass-fronted

impudence; your shouts of liberty and

equality,

hollow

mockery; your prayers and hymns, your sermons and thanksgivings, with your religious parade and solemnity, deception, impiety and hypocrisy

would disgrace

a nation of savages.

—a .

.

him, mere bombast, fraud,

are, to

thin veil to cover

whole

h\'o great political parties)

is

political

up crimes which

.

“You boast of your love of liberty, your superior Christianity, while the

all

civilization,

power of the nation

solemnly pledged

to support

(as

and your pure

embodied

in the

and perpetuate the

enslavement of three millions of your countrymen. You hurl your anathemas at the

crown-headed

democratic

tyrants of Russia

institutions,

and Austria and pride yourselves on your

while you yourselves consent to be the mere tools and

body-guards of the tyrants of Virginia and Carolina. You invite to your shores fugitives of oppression

from abroad, honor them with banquets, greet them

with ovations, cheer them, toast them, salute them, protect them, and pour

out your

money to them

like water;

advertise, hunt, arrest, shoot,

and

own

land you

glory in your refinement

and your

but the fugitives from your

kill.

You

universal education; yet you maintain a system as barbarous

ever stained the character of a nation in pride,

make

orators,

till

as

— a system begun in avarice, supported

You shed tears over fallen Hungary, and of her wrongs the theme of your poets, statesmen, and

and perpetuated

the sad story

and dreadful

in cruelty.

your gallant sons are ready

to fly to

arms

to vindicate

her cause

against the oppressor; but, in regard to the ten thousand wrongs of the

605

Radical Thought: Socialism and

American

slave,

you would enforce the

an enemy of the nation

who

strictest silence,

make

dares to

Communism

and would

hail

him

as

those wrongs the subject of public

discourse!”"^

Above all, we must remember the black worker was the ultimate exploited; that he formed that mass of labor which had neither wish nor power to escape from the labor

status, in

by alliance with capital,

order to directly exploit other laborers, or indirectly, to share in their exploitation.

To be

sure, the black

mass, developed again and again, here and there, capitalistic groups in

New

Orleans, in Charleston and in Philadelphia; groups willing to join white capital in exploiting labor; but they

were driven back into the mass by

prejudice before they had reached a permanent foothold; and thus the the

racial

became

all

more bitter against all organization which by means of race prejudice, monopoly of wealth, sought to exclude men from making a living.

or

It

was thus the black worker,

in the

as

founding stone of a new economic system

nineteenth century and for the

He

America.

was

modern

world,

who brought civil war

underlying cause, in spite of every effort to base the

its

in

strife

upon union and national power. That dark and vast sea of human labor in China and India, the South Seas and all Africa; in the West Indies and Central America and in the United

— that great majority of mankind, on whose bent and broken backs rest today the founding stones of modern industry — shares a common destiny; States

it is

despised and rejected by race and color; paid a wage below the level of decent living; driven, beaten,

world’s raw material

prisoned and enslaved in

and luxury — cotton, wool,

fibers, spices, rubber, silks,

shall

we end

the

list

all

but name; spawning the

coffee, tea, cocoa,

palm

lumber, copper, gold, diamonds, leather

and where?

All these are gathered

up

oil,

— how

at prices lowest of

the low, manufactured, transformed and transported at fabulous gain; and the

and displayed and made the basis of world power and universal dominion and armed arrogance in London and Paris, Berlin and Rome, New York and Rio de Janeiro. resultant wealth

Here

is

is

the real

distributed

modern

labor problem. Here

Religion and Democracy, of Humanity. ing.

Out

is

the kernel of the problem of

Words and

futile gestures avail

noth-

of the exploitation of the dark proletariat

filched from

human

harnessed Power tion of labor

of workers

veil

beasts which, in

comes the Surplus Value cultured lands, the Machine and

and conceal. Tlie emancipation of man

and the emancipation of labor

who

are yellow,

brown and

is

To

a universal

black.

wreck of faith

cheerfulness, and foreigners to hate.

606

the emancipa-

the freeing of that basic majority

Dark, shackled knights of labor, clinging

Amidst

is

still

The Black Worker

These know ye

not, these

But these

speak to you Beatitudes.

shall

have ye not received,

Around them surge the tides of all your strife. Above them rise the august monuments

Of all

your outward splendor, but they stand

Unenvious

in thought,

and bide

their time.

Leslie

P.

Hill

Notes 1.

Compare

A. E. McKinley, The Suffrage Franchise in the Thirteen English Colonies in America,

p. 137. 2.

A Picture of Slavery Drawn

3.

Compare

4.

Woodson, Negro Orators and Their Orations,

from the Decisions of Southern Courts,

Bancroft, Slave -Trading in the

p. 5.

Old South; Weld, American pp. 218-19.

607

Slavery as

It Is.

Lifting from the

We

have been taught

Our whole education

terms of Classes: of Bests and the Smartest.

to think in

Mass except as the occasional and doubtConsider the enormous task to which Russia has

ignores the

feeder of the Classes.

ful

Bottom

She proposes to make a nation where the masses rule. In America, tjie mass has never ruled: always it has been the rule of the rich and well-born. On the frontier, west and south, we once tried such democherself.

set

racy;

on

it

died before slavery and Big Business. Here in Russia

which attempts democracy in the past:

a vaster scale,

frustrated

is

another

at the outset to control the thing that

Private Wealth.

Many

wise

men

trial

has

earnestly

and honestly believe the task is impossible: that for all foreseeable time, the mass of men will serve some form of aristocracy, while civilization will always vision

mean

the culture of the Few. Consider though the grandeur of the

which makes

this Possible Best, consist of all

face the inevitable difficulties of

all

beginnings.

men.

One

First of all

we must

will find in Russia

and bad manners. Eating and bathing habits are unpleasant. Equality of status, where there is as yet no real equality of culture and habit, has been endlessly inveighed against, from the Erench Revolution to the today

dirt

Emancipation of American Negroes. This today greatly bothers observers of Russia. They are obsessed by the glamour of culture and wealth in a few, despite the degradation of the mass

on which

this culture

is

built.

Rich East

Crand Dukes, bring to such people only the They mention them with hushed voices and

Indians, rich Chinese, Russian

deepest admiration and envy.

What American who now rails at the rule have accepted a summons to the Winter Palace

accept their notice with reverence. of Russian boors, would not

with tears of gratitude?

But

all this

does not avoid the crucial question

— can workers and peasants

build a nation which will not, like other nations, eventually reconstruct P>om

the Pittsburgh Courier, January 23, 1937.

608

Lifting from the

Bottom

on the old lines: with perhaps less poverty and distress at bottom, but with the same ruling class at top, whether it is called Nobility, or Middle society

Classes?

If

it is

done,

this

is

certain, the task

is

going to

call for Ability

and

an unusual amount and kind. Can peasant Russia, and Russian workers produce such men as can and will they do the gigantic task facing this Sacrifice of

land?

Who knows?

609

My

Evolving Program for

Negro Freedom

My visit to Germany and on

Italy

return,

of war were

all

Union

the Soviet

marked another change over Russia

in

in 1926,

and then

to

Turkey and

my thought and action. The

marks

— of the war of France and England to turn

back

Wild children were in the sewers of Moscow; food was scarce, clothes in rags, and the fear of renewed Western aggression hung like a pall. Yet Russia was and still is to my mind, the most hopeful land in the modern world. Never before had I seen a suppressed mass of poor, working the clock of revolution.

— people as ignorant, poor, superstitious and cov/ed as my own AmeriNegroes — so lifted in hope and starry-eyed with new determination, as

people

can

the peasants and workers of Russia, from Leningrad and

from Kiev

to

were jammed, the theatres crowded, the new places and new programs each day; and work was joy.

Odessa; the

schools opening to

Their whole

life

Moscow to Gorki and

art galleries

was renewed and

filled

with vigor and ideal, as Youth

Day

in

to

no

Red Square proclaimed.

the

saw of course but

I

little

of Russia in one short month.

I

came

conclusions as to whether the particular form of the Russian state was permanent or a passing phase. I met but few of their greater leaders; only Radek did I

know

well,

and he died

in the

subsequent purge.

matter of war and murder, no more than

am

certain:

I

do not judge Russia

in the

judge England. But of one thing

I

believe in the dictum of Karl Marx, that the

tion of a nation

when

I

I

is

widely decisive for

its

politics,

its

art

economic foundaand its culture. saw I

American Negro belief that the right to vote would give us work and decent wage; would abolish our illiteracy and decrease our sickness and crime, was justified only in part; that on the clearly,

froni

What

the

I

left

Russia, that our

Negro Wants

(

I’he University of

North Carolina

610

Press, 1944).

My Evolving we were

contrary, until

never be allowed

result

Negro Freedom

for

able to earn a decent, independent living,

that poverty was not our fault but our misfortune, the

and aim of our segregation and color

few of our

capitalists share

would never be

Modern

Immediately,

Communism

with whites in the exploitation of our masses,

I

to

its

sorrow.

modified

my

program again:

I

did not believe that the

of the Russians was the program for America; least of

minority group like the Negroes;

Communist

caste; that the solution of letting a

a solution of our problem, but the forging of eternal chains, as

knows

India

we would

caused our ignorance,

to cast a free ballot; that poverty

and crime; and

sickness

Program

I

all for

a

saw that the program of the American

party was suicidal. But

I

did believe that a people where the

differentiation in classes because of wealth

had only begun, could be so

guided by intelligent leaders that they would develop into a consumerconscious people, producing for use and not primarily for

profit,

and working

into the surrounding industrial organization so as to reinforce the

revolution

sooner or

bound to develop

later.

I

in the

United States and

all

economic

over Europe and Asia

believed that revolution in the production and distribution of

wealth could be a slow, reasoned development and not necessarily a blood bath.

believed that 13 millions of people, increasing, albeit slowly in intel-

I

and action on the abolition of their poverty, as to work in conjunction with the most intelligent body of American thought; and that in the future as in the past, out of the mass of American Negroes would arise a far-seeing leadership in lines of economic ligence, could so concentrate their thought

reform. If little

had not been

it

monthly which

for the depression, I

had founded

financial assistance for twenty years,

way

I

think that through the Crisis, the

and carried on with almost no could have started this program on the

in 1910, I

adoption by American Negroes. But the depression

to

of the Crisis dependent on the charity of persons forced In a

it

under the control of influences

program of mere agitation

to

its

fatal

whom

for “rights,”

constructive effort to achieve those rights,

who

I

made

the survival

feared this thought and

such a program was Greek.

without clear conception of

was not interested, because

I

saw

weakness.

MY PRESENT PROGRAM About 1925, the General Education Board adopted a new program. It had become clear that the studied neglect of the Negro college was going too far; and

that the

Hampton-Tuskegee program was inadequate even

611

for

its

own

Radical Thought; Socialism and

A

objects.

Communism

plan was adopted which envisaged, by consolidation and endow-

ment, the establishment

in the

South of five centers of University education

Negroes. Atlanta had to be one of these centers, and in 1929, Atlanta

for

University

became

the graduate school of an affiliated system of colleges

new era John Hope, became

which promised friend,

a

in higher education for Negroes.

president,

him

out on returning to Atlanta to help

me

course, as Georgia could stand

seemed

poetic

in this great enterprise.

to

me

sound

me

He promised far,

of

it.

that a return to Atlanta

would not only have

a certain

but would relieve the National Association for the

justification,

Advancement of Colored People from sion, as well as

to

life-long

thought and writing, and freedom of expression, so

leisure for

It

and immediately began

My

from the greater

financial

burden during the depres-

effort of re-considering

its

program.

essential

With the unexpected coming of a Second World War, this move of mine has proved a relief. However it only postpones the inevitable decision as to what American Negroes are striving for, and how eventually they are going to get

it.

The untimely plans, following

death of John

my

wanted

in

1936 marred the

first

with leisure to write,

historical studies

1

wanted

to

the systematic study of the

1

my mind

in fill

fell

in the back-

concerning the Negro race; secondly

to establish at Atlanta University a scholarly journal of

research on race problems; finally,

of our

full fruition

Those plans

return to Atlanta, in 1933.

into three categories;

ground of certain

Hope

wanted

comment and

some form

to restore in

1

at Atlanta,

Negro problems.

Between 1935 and 1941, 1 wrote and published three volumes: a study of the Negro in Reconstruction; a study of the black race in history and an. autobiographical sketch of these

1934

1

was anxious

to

my

concept of the American race problem. To

add an Encyclopedia of the Negro.

had been chosen

in

Fund

to

to act as editor-in-chief of the project of the Phelps-Stokes

prepare and publish such a work.

on

1

1

spent nearly ten years of intermittent effort

and secured co-operation from many scholars, white and America, Europe and Africa. But the necessary funds could not be

this project

black, in

secured. Perhaps again project, built

it

was too soon

to

expect large aid for so ambitious a

mainly on Negro scholarship. Nevertheless,

ume summarizing In 1940, there

this effort will

was established

“Atlanta University Review of

be published

a preliminary vol-

in 1944.

at Atlanta, a quarterly

Race and Culture.”

magazine, P/ry/on, the

It is

now

finishing

its fifth

volume. In the attempt to restore at Atlanta the study of the

broad and inclusive way,

had passed since

we faced the fact that in

Negro problem

the twenty-three years

their discontinuance, the scientific study of the

612

in a

which

American

My Evolving

Program

for

Negro Freedom

Negro had spread widely and efficiently. Especially in the white institutions of the South had intelligent interest been aroused. There was, however, still need of systematic, comprehensive study and measurement, bringing to bear the indispensable point of view and inner knowledge of Negroes themselves.

Something of

was being done

this

efficiency, large funds

The

at Fisk University,

were required

for

but for the widest

South-wide study.

solution of this problem, without needless duplication of

good work,

mere pride of institution, came to me from W. R. Banks, principal of the Prairie View State College, Texas. He had been a student at Atlanta University

or for

He

during the days of the conferences.

took the idea with

conducted studies and conferences there

for

twenty years.

him

He

to Texas,

and

suggested that

Atlanta University unite the seventeen Negro Land-Grant colleges in the

South

in a joint co-operative study, to

be carried on continuously.

laid before

I

the annual meeting of the presidents of these colleges in 1941, such a plan.

I

proposed the strengthening of their departments of the social sciences; that

each institution take

its

own

state as

its

field

of study; that an annual confer-

ence be held where representatives of the colleges came

into consultation

with the best sociologists of the land, and decide on methods of work and subjects of study.

A

volume giving the more important

results

would be

published annually.

This plan was inaugurated

in the

Spring of 1943, with

all

seventeen of the

Land-Grant colleges represented, and eight leading American attendance.

The

first

annual report appeared

sociologists in

in the Fall of 1943.

Thus,

after a

quarter century, the Atlanta conferences live again.

To complete vitally

this idea, there

is

need

important Northern Negro group.

Howard,

Fisk, Wilberforce,

to include a similar study of the

The

leading Negro universities like

Lincoln of Pennsylvania and of Missouri, and

others might with Northern universities jointly carry out this part of the

scheme. This program came

to full fruition in

1944,

when

a report of the

first

conference was published as Atlanta University Publicatioji No. 22. Then, without warning, the University retired

renewed

me

from work and gave up

this

project.

SUMMARY Finally and in summation, what

have wanted

for

my

is it

that in sixty years of purposive endeavor,

people? Just what do

I

I

mean by “Freedom”?

Proceeding from the vague and general plans of youth, through the more particular

program of active middle

life,

613

and on

to the general

and

at the

same

Communism

Radical Thought: Socialism and

time more specific plans of the days of reflexion.

and contradictions, these

By “Freedom”

and

for

see, with overlappings

can

things:

Negroes,

I

meant and

American

social equality with

I

mean,

still

economic, political

full

citizens, in thought, expression

and

action,

with no discrimination based on race or color.

A statement such ity is

as this

today widely advocated as the basis for real political power:

beginning

demand

to

for all persons, the right to

maintain a decent standard of

demand

that

all

Beyond these

“equality.” Yet

Beyond

living.

h\^o

it is

work

at a

equal-

men

wage which

that the right to vote

some

persons governed should have

is

are will

the

voice in government.

demands, so widely admitted, what does one mean by

demand for “social equality”? The phrase is unhappy because in too

common

a

meaning of both “social” and be discarded, and it stands especially

of the vague

use to

an attitude toward the Negro. “Social”

for

Economic

challenges immediate criticism.

is

used to refer not only to the

intimate contacts of the family group and of personal companions, but also

and increasingly

to the

which we carry out our

We may list the

whole

vast

complex of human

relationships through

cultural patterns.

activities called “social,”

roughly as follows:

A. Private social intercourse (marriages, friendships,

home entertainment).

B. Public services (residence areas, travel, recreation

hotels

and

and information,

restaurants).

C. Social

uplift (education, religion, science

Here are three categories of social

and

art).

activities calling for three interpretations

of equality. In the matter of purely personal contacts like marriage, intimate friendships

and sociable gatherings, “equality” means the

own mates and

close companions.

The

right to select

may be

basis of choice

ones

cultured taste

whim, but it is an unquestionable right so long as my free choice does not deny equal freedom on the part of others. No one can for a moment or vagrant

question the preference of a wliite

man

to

marry a white

white friends to dinner. But by the same token black Othello; or

if

their right also

is

Naturally,

if

an individual choice

injury, society

must forbid

that the social

body always

tion

is

it.

It

Desdemona prefers a among his dinner guests

undeniable and

custom an inadmissible infringement of civil

or invite only

white

Theodore Roosevelt includes

Booker T. Washington, or

if a

woman



its

restriction

by law

rights.

like intermarriage

is

proven

to

be a social

has been the contention of the white South

suffers

always possible where there

from miscegenation, and that miscegenais

friendship and often where there

is

mere

courtesy.

This reason

belief,

why

modern science has

effectively answered.

There

there should not be intermarriage between two

614

is

no

scientific

human

beings

My Evolving who happen

to

Program

be of different race or

limitation of individual preference based

own

on

mean any

This does

color.

race, color, or

who do

does limit any compulsion of persons reasons not to follow their

Negro Freedom

for

forcible

any other reason;

it

not accept the validity of such

choices.

The marriage of Frederick Douglass to a white woman did not injure society. The marriage of the Negro Greek scholar, William Scarborough, to Sarah Bierce, principal of the Wilberforce Normal School, was not a social catastrophe.

The

la Pailleterie

mulatto descendants of Louise

which demands every

gift to

respect. In like

many, who

or

disagree,

manner, the

demand

and discrimination

exercise personal taste

and opportunities, one’s is

A

purveyor of

rights offered.

seek a

surroundings and

But such

is

joint

owner and

person has a right to

among

cannot be exclusively enjoyed

rights

right to

limited not only by the free

choice of others, but by the fact that the whole social body

many of the facilities and home in healthy and beautiful

no matter

tastes of others,

equal respect.

In the second category of public services

associates.

the Marquis de

mankind. The determination of any white have children with Negro, Chinese, or Irish blood is a desire

were a great

person not to

how few

Dumas and

if

friends

and

they involve

confining others to the slums. Social equality here denies the right of any discrimination and segregation which compels citizens to lose their rights of

enjoyment and accommodation

in the

common

wealth.

If

without injustice,

separation in travel, eating and lodging can be carried out, any or individual has a right to practise this

is

rarely possible

and

in

an overwhelming majority,

in

accord with his

taste or desire.

But

such case the demand of an individual or even to discriminate at the cost of

and suffering on the

disease

it

community

part of the minority

inconvenience,

unfair,

is

unjust and

undemocratic. In matters

United

connected with these groups of social

States,

and

activity,

the usage in the

especially in the South, constitutes the sorest

points of controversy in the racial situation; especially in the

individuals

and

classes

among Negroes whose

social progress

is

and

bitterest

life

of those

at

once the

proof and measure of the capabilities of the race.

That the denial of the public accommodations

right to exclude

Negroes from

may involve counter costs on

residential areas

the part of the majority,

by unpleasant contacts and even dangerous experiences,

been the

fact has

society

wide opposition

and of deep-seated

leveling

On

basis of

fear that

to the

democracy

and

is

often true.

That

democratization of modern necessarily involves social

and degeneration.

the whole, however,

convince mankind that the

modern thought and experience have tended evils

to

of caste discrimination against the depressed

elements of the mass are greater and more dangerous

615

to progress

than the

Radical Thought; Socialism and

affront to natural tastes

and the

Communism

from unpleasant contacts involved

recoil

the just sharing of public conveniences with

all citizens.

This conviction

is

in

the

meaning of America, and it has had wide and increasing success in incorporating Irish, and German peasants, Slavic laborers and even Negro slaves into a new, virile and progressive American Culture. At the incorporation of the Negro freedman into the social and political body, the white South has naturally balked and impeded it by law, custom, and race philosophy. This is historically explicable. No group of privileged slave-owners is easily and willingly going to recognize their former slaves as men. But just as truly this caste leveling downward must be definitely, openly, and determinedly opposed or civilization suffers. What was once a local and parochial problem, now looms as a world threat! If caste and segregation is the correct answer to the race problem in America, it is the answer to the race contacts of the world. This the Atlantic Charter and the Cairo conference

denied, and to back this denial

the threat of Japan and

lies

Asia,

all

and of

Africa.

What shall

we, what can we, do about

it

in the

United States?

We must first

Jim-Crow legislation: the freezing in law of discrimination based on race and color — in voting, in work, in travel, in public service. attack

solely

To the third category of social activity, concerned with social uplift, one would say at first that not only should everyone be admitted but all even urged to join. efforts

on

It

toward public ends. In so

intercourse, with

its

freedom

But such organizations have no right

church

of religion;

if

a school

is

private

assume the functions and

is

who exclude

is

to arrogate to

and based

and

it is

not a public center

for a selected clientele,

is

The

it

must not

underlying

that the education of all children

the best and surest path to democracy.

the public or any part of

it

social

themselves exclusive

privileges of public schools.

is

private

to all.

a social clique,

philosophy of our public school system together at public expense

membership

under the immunities of private

fall

limitation of equal

rights of public service. If a

of these organizations are private

far as their

and compatibility, they

taste

many

happens, however, that

Those

from the schools, have no right

to

use public funds for private purposes. Separate Negro public schools or separate

girl’s

schools or separate Catholic schools are not inadmissible

simply because of separation; but only

development of democratic no schools at all.

Beyond rock

w^all

human

all this,

ideals

and when

and

when such

gives to the separated, poor schools or

legal inequalities pass

of social discrimination between

intercourse.

selection, by

So

far as

means of which

human

from the statute books,

is

616

slowly

a

beings will long'persist in

such discrimination

the worst

separation hinders the

is

a

method of

weeded and the

social

best protected

.

My Evolving

Program

for

Negro Freedom

and encouraged, such discrimination has justification. But the danger has always been and still persists, that what is weeded out is the Different and not the Dangerous; and what is preserved is the Powerful and not the Best. The only defense against

this

compatible with social

So

far as

human

is

the widest

contacts and acquaintanceships

safety.

friendship and intermingling are based on broad and

and ignore

catholic reasoning

human

and inconsequential prejudices, the hap-

petty

and the richer the general social life. In this realm freedom, toward which the soul of man has always striven: the

pier will be the individual lies

the real

be

right to

Here

lies

democracy which man.

the great

first

provides food, shelter and organized security for

the problem of subsistence

moment

is

met and order

is

In the activities of such a world, free:

comes

lies in differentiation.

men are not compelled to be white

in order to

they can be black, yellow or red; they can mingle or stay separate.

mind, the untrammelled

free

secured, there

of civilization: the development of individual personality;

the right of variation; the richness of a culture that

be

ideals.

the real answer to the leveling compulsions and equalitarianisms of

that

Once

be individual and pursue personal aims and

different, to

section of total

life

is

taste hurts

learn that not in exclusiveness is

can

revel. In

only a section and a small

discrimination inadmissible and that

freedom stops yours or your the very variety

taste

and

The

me. Gradually such

isolation lies inspiration

is

a free

and

where

my

world

will

joy,

but that

the reservoir of invaluable experience and emotion. This

crowning of equalitarian democracy

in artistic

freedom of difference

is

the

real next step of culture.

The hope of civilization lies not in exclusion, but in inclusion of all human elements; we find the richness of humanity not in the Social Register, but in the City Directory; not in great aristocracies, chosen people and superior races, but in the throngs of disinherited

and underfed men. Not the

lifting

of

unawakened mighty, will reveal the possibilities of genius, gift and miracle, in mountainous treasure-trove, which hitherto civilization has scarcely touched; and yet boasted blatantly and even the lowly, but the unchaining of the

glorified in

answer

its

poverty. In world-wide equality of

to every

meticulous

taste

and each

To achieve this freedom, I have essayed 1885-1910 1 “The Truth shall make ye free.”

human development

is

the

rare personality.

these

main

paths:

.

This plan was directed toward the majority of white Americans, and rested

on the assumption

that

once they realized the

concerning Negroes and race

relations, they

wrong.

617

scientifically attested truth

would take action

to correct all

Radical Thought; Socialism and

2.

Communism

1900-1930

United action on the part of thinking Americans, white and black,

to force

the truth concerning Negroes to the attention of the nation.

This plan assumed that the majority of Americans would rush defence of democracy,

if

they realized

how

to the

race prejudice was threatening

it,

not only for Negroes but for whites; not only in America but in the world. 3.

1928-to the present

Scientific investigation

and organized

operation, to secure the survival of the

ment of America and the world

is

action

Negro

reason,

men do

but follow social pressures,

Negroes, in close co-

race, until the cultural develop-

willing to recognize

This plan realizes that the majority of with

among

Negro freedom.

not usually act in accord

inherited

customs and long-

established, often sub-conscious, patterns of action. Consequently, race preju-

dice in America will linger long

black race to maintain

its

and may even

increase.

It is

the duty of the

cultural advance, not for itself alone, but for the

emancipation of mankind, the realization of democracy and the progress of civilization.

618

Must Come

‘‘There

Ch ange

There

on

are

this

in the

platform tonight

five

a

Vast Soeial

United States”

persons

who

stand indicted by the

Federal Dept, of Justice as agents of a foreign principal because through the

Peace Information Center they distributed news of peace movements through the world,

which the

press ignored, including distribution of the

Appeal against the atomic bomb. They

Stockholm

are:

Elizabeth Moos, a teacher; Kyrle

Elkin, a businessman; Sylvia Soloff, a clerk

and stenographer; Abbott Simon,

and organizer of this congress; and myself The basic hope of democracy is the power of the people eventually to decide great issues of state by fair elections. But the effective use of this a veteran

power depends on the knowledge of conditions which this electorate possesses. If they cannot know the truth; if they cannot ascertain the real facts, then the whole meaning and efficiency of the democratic process

fall

to the

ground.

Today launched

it

is

clear to

in this

all

who know

country the greatest

the facts that

effort at

American industry has

propaganda the world has ever

witnessed. In comparison. Hitler and Mussolini fade to insignificance. daily press with few exceptions

is

Our

controlled in presentation of fact and

expression of opinion by the organized industrial interests of the United States.

These

interests

want war. They want war because only by war can

China, Africa, Southeast Asia and the Middle East be kept

in their control, as

the source of the greatest profit for industrial enterprise.

But even an industrial dictatorship could not admit

profit as the sole

end of

work, and increase of profit as the cause of world war. So in the United States

we

on the platform and in newspaper, magaour way of life is in grave and imminent danger.

are told over radio, in cinema,

zine and book, that From

the National Guardian, July

1

1,

1951.

619

Radical Thought: Socialism and

.

.

.

Just as in the dark ages,

we

Communism

stampeded by witchcould rear itself in the shadows into gibbering idiots. Today by

are letting ourselves be

words. In that day, a veiled and-awesome figure

and by yelling “Abacadabra,” turn strong men yelling “Communist,” we can shut the mouths of nearly

all

who want

peace,

not war.

Men have a perfect right to disagree with communism, with men may

methods;

method of

its

and

objects

honestly believe that the United States has a better

industrial organization than the Soviet

right to assert in the face of

Union; but

overwhelming testimony

that

men

have no

no honesty and

no hard work and sacrifice; no intelligent leadership, has occurred in the Soviet Union; and that disagreement with it must involve painting 200 million people as inhuman devils, and assuming that we are

sincerity of effort;

God’s

own

angels. In that direction lies

tion needs sympathy, understanding

and of nations

differ

to

work

as

unending hate and war; while

and world peace, with the

each

civiliza-

right of men to

will.

Whether we like it or not, most of the people of the world today live under socialism or communism. We cannot stop this by force and should not if we could. We can so improve our own system of economy that the world will see the advantage of it over all others if this prove true. The way to start this is not war nor slander. It is stupid to abolish democracy among ourselves in order to prove the blessings of democracy to others. Nearly all social questions and reforms which we must discuss and answer are matters

which science has already discussed, experimented with and

offered solutions, years before the Soviet

Union was born. Yet when we dare

touch these matters, we are denied freedom of speech. Subjects

like

wealth

production and distribution; the role of the state in industry and the causes of poverty are being thrown out of our school curricula and radicalism

Yet

Wliy at

if

we

that with

all

our fingertips, the

that the

rig

Why

is it

the market; or

the power lying

Why

who own

who

lie

and cheat and

at ease

but too often those

consist of

steal get

who scheme and

contrive and

spending what somebody else earned?

face; all schools teach

income

is it

the land and crops; the machines

T here are fundamental questions as to work and wealth which

must

poor?

and clothing and food, are not always those who

sacrifice, sit

those

all

is

constructively have often the hardest

while thousands

living,

capital; the buildings

work and save and

that this rich world

hardest get the lowest income?

men who think most clearly and

power and wealth?

is it

the wealth nature furnishes free, and

men who work

time making a decent

and

are accused of

dare mention these matters.

we must discuss them. We must ask why

is it,

we

and

all

all

men

honest pulpits discuss. Does a man’s

what he makes? No. Not even

620

in primitive times

was

this

“There

And

true.

Must Come

Change

a Vast Social

in the

United

States"'

today the simplest work of production from catching a

Dam

building Boulder

a complicated social effort involving

is

fish to

from 10

to

10,000 workers, planners, managers and thinkers, and using even so-called

“unemployed” housewives and mothers, it lasts so long in time and is so intricate and complicated in technique that no mathematical formula can

show

what each worker contributes to the final value. Only reason and justice can in the end determine income, to each accord-

possibly

exactly

ing to his need

and from each what he

best can do,

enunciated before the Russian Revolution was thought

is

the high ideal,

of.

This ideal the

Union admits it has not yet attained, but declares its firm purpose to reach it. While the United States not only denies the justice of this aim but bluntly orders that it must not even be attempted. We have got our economy upside down, our reward for work backside foremost and our brains so addled that if anyone dares question this insanity of our modern civilization we yell “subversive” and scare all fools out of their Soviet

few

wits.

If

sincere dislike of this state of affairs

God, no stop

it.

force of army, nor

jail

better than

or

kill

and individual

initiative,

manufacture communists

to think will

them. Nothing

communism.

the living

power of wealth, nor smartness of intellect will ever

Denial of this right

you can

communism, then by

is

If our

will stop

such

communism

faster

than

but something

present policies are examples of free enterprise

they initiate crime and suffering as well as wealth;

if

American way of life, God save America! There is no way in the world for us to preserve the ideals of a democratic America, save by drastically curbing the present power of concentrated this

is

the

wealth, by assuming ownership of

many

some

natural resources, by administering

of our key industries and by socializing our services for public welfare.

This need not

mean

communism

the adoption of the

of the Soviet Union, nor

the socialism of Britain, nor even of the near-socialism of France, Italy or

Scandinavia; but either in

economy,

restore the

New

some way

by the

vast social

thrifty

will kill all

change

in the

will of the people; certain

malice toward none but charity for

and

socialize our state or

we

dreams of Democracy or the

and ignorance; or of peace instead of war.

There must come violent, but

some degree, we

Deal and inaugurate the welfare

descend into a military fascism which abolition of poverty

or to

and complete sympathy

all”;

United

States; a

change not

and inexorable, carried out “with

with meticulous justice to the rich

for the poor, the sick

and the ignorant;

with freedom and democracy for America, and on earth peace, good will

toward men.

621

Negroes and the Crisis of Capitalism

How

“free''

was the black freedman

tools, or land.

the land

in the

1863?

He had no

Thaddeiis Stevens begged the government

which

his

blood had

fertilized for

Frederick Douglass and Charles

The

in

United States

244

Sumner asked

years.

for the

clothes, to give

The

no home,

him

a bit of

nation refused.

Negro the

right to vote.

nation yielded because only Negro votes could force the white South to

conform

to the

demands of Big Business

in tariff legislation

and debt

control.

This accomplished, the nation took away the Negro's vote, and the vote of

most poor whites went with

A

it.

economic development followed. In the South the land was rich and the climate mild. There was sun and rain for grain, fruit, and fiber. There were natural resources in rivers, harbors, and forests. In the bosom of fantastic

the earth lay coal, iron,

oil,

sulphur, and

salt.

was practically given by the government

to or

Only

a small part of

it

went

All this either already

belonged

landholder and

capitalist.

to the

to labor, black or white.

Capital was needed to develop this [into an] economic paradise. Covern-

ment furnished much of

this capital free to the

landholder and employer.

Railroads were subsidized, and rivers and harbors improved; private wealth largely escaped taxation.

control,

When

The

and cheap immigrant

Southern labor

lost

half

North, fattened on

tariff legislation,

money

poured private capital into the South. vote, landholders and capitalists filled the

labor, its

and Congress with servants of exploitation. This gave all the powerful chairmanships in Congress to the South under the Democrats, and state legislatures

under Republicans. During World War I, a large part of the military training program was located in the South, and the government large influence

From

the

Monthly Review, 4

(April 1953):

478-485.

622

Negroes and the Crisis of Capitalism

in the

United States

overpaid interested landlords and merchants and contractors to the tune of

hundreds of millions of repeated in World in the

South went

During and

The

War

II.

dollars

World War

relief

be largely

to

money paid

out

not to workers. II,

Southern industry moved into high

gear.

Federal government poured billions of grants-in-aid into the South.

Washington was

lavish with “Certificates of Necessity” to build

and owners of oil wells were given

God

performance which was

During the depression, most

to landlords,

after

—a

new

tax rebates for depletion of the

factories, oil

which

gave the nation; and today they seek to grab the $80 billion worth of oil

underseas.

Above

all,

the South furnished and boasted of one of the largest pools of

cheap, docile, unorganized labor, skilled and unskilled, in the civilized world.

This mass of labor was historically

split into

white and black, each hating and

fearing each other to a degree that persons unfamiliar with the region cannot

begin to imagine. Southern labor was further

ganized groups; and

finally, all

split into

American labor was

split

organized and unor-

by red-baiting and the

smear of “Communism.”

which the state governments improved. Labor laws in the South were lax and carelessly enforced; company towns arose under complete corporate control; the police and militia were Here was

a paradise for the investor,

organized against labor. Race hate and fear and scab tactics were deliberately

encouraged so

as to

make any complaint

or effort at betterment liable to burst

into riot, lynching, or race war.

The

been

1919 the South turned out

than a

fifth

of our mining products; by 1946 the proportion had risen to nearly half.

The

result has

startling. In

less

value of manufactures in the South has risen in thirty years from a tenth to nearly a

fifth

of the national

are seeking the South; since

invested there in

new

Many of the new and promising industries World War II, no less than $11 billion has been

total.

industrial plants.

of the nation’s cotton mills and virtually is

drawing the woolen and worsted

new

empire

investments.

all

mills,

soon follow. Paper and pulp mills and in

The

The Southwest

Southeast already has 80 percent

the

new chemical

and the

textile

plastics represent

is

fiber industry.

machinery

It

mills will

hundreds of millions

perhaps the fastest-growing chemical

in the world.

This newest South, turning back

to

future prosperity can best be built

disfranchised lowest masses

— and

its

slave past, believes

its

present and

on the poverty and ignorance of

these low-paid workers

now

its

include not

only Negroes, but Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and the unskilled, unorganized whites.

Progress by

means of

this

poverty

South.

623

is

the creed of the present

Communism

Radical Thought: Socialism and

The Northern

white worker long went his way oblivious to what was

happening

in the

North

World War

after

South.

man has been

black

was not

I,

He awoke when

and he welcomed him by

They excluded Negroes.

unions.

their attitude

riots.

Slowly, however, the

integrated into the unions, except those in

and had no chance

skilled

the black Southern laborer fled

One

to learn.

whose

of these was the textile

them

taking a long time to prove to

It is

toward Negroes was dangerous.

If

he

crafts

Negro wages were low

that

in the

South, what business was that of New England white labor? Today the union

man

sees that

was

it

England and the North workers are nation,

idle.

prices they

Wages wage to

This

into

illustrates a

factories are

paradox of capitalism:

and the world, the workers are too poor

while machinery

wages

moving out of New the South. One hundred thousand textile

The

his business.

is

able to

make more

textiles

to

buy the

than

its

in the

South, the

textiles

they need;

owners can

South are 20 percent lower than in the North, and Negro a legacy from NIRA, are at least 20 percent below white wages. This

as

in the

$5 billion a

between North and South represents increased year. Small wonder that the Negro population

South decreased by 50,000

profits of

in the last

decade, and that the

North increased by 55 percent. Of nine million

$4

in the rural

number of Negroes

industrial workers in

the South, less than three million are unionized. Last year 40,000 the

the

demand.

differential

in the

sell at

members

of

CIO Textile Workers Union, which excludes Negroes, struck in the South,

They lost, and their membership fell from 20 to 15 percent of the operatives. The carpet baggers today are the vast Northern corporations which own the new Southern industry, and the sca-

and spent $ 1 ,2 50,000

in five weeks.

lawags are the Southern politicians

whom

they send to legislatures and

Congress.

The

organized effort of American industry to usurp government, surpasses

anything in modern

Erom

learned.

history,

even that of Adolf Hitler from

the use of psychology to spread truth has

whom

come

it

was

the use of

organized gathering of news to guide public opinion and then deliberately to mislead

it

by

scientific advertising

and propaganda. This has led

in

our day

to

suppression of truth, omission of facts, misinterpretation of news, and deliberate falsehood cals,

on

a

wide

news gathering and

the throttling of

scale.

this

capitalistic control of

distribution, radio,

It

and

distortion of education

can only be countered by public knowledge of

government by propaganda

In the nation as a

books and periodi-

cinema, and television has made

democracy possible and the

failure of justice widespread.

what

Mass

whole we have

full

skilled workers, but this state of affairs

accomplishing and

is

how'.

employment and high wages is

most

maintained by manufacturing arms

and ammunition which rapidly deteriorate

624

for

in value,

and by giving

it

aw'ay

and

Negroes and the Crisis of Capitalism in the United States

paying for

it

by taxes which lower

can we maintain

higli

wages, and by high prices.

what

Some Negro

is

have yielded to panic;

much

to

Much

.

.

.

to lose in property, credit, or reputation

colored authors in recent

tw^o

books have deleted references

been devoted

say to this situation? This question

the real nature of this group today?

leaders with

the witchhunters.

long

merry-go-round?

this

What now must American Negroes raises another:

How

new

editions of their

Robeson and myself in order

to Paul

to

appease

time and thought of misguided intellectuals has

helping deprive American Negroes of natural leadership or to

them into silence by threat of imprisonment, loss of work, or by smearing them as “Communists.” Negro colleges especially are silenced and scaring

influenced by funds raised by Big Business and

visits

from distinguished

Their courses in sociology, economics, and history are carefully

capitalists.

watched.

This kind of suppression and censorship, however, does not solve anything; it

but complicates the situation. For a time

their best-trained

release the

and

and wealthiest leaders, but despite

travel with less

eat in the

more

constitutional law

annoyance; they

may

let

and mounting

breached. But with

not soon be broken. Even as

will

be more deeply

felt

may

by the

down

it

what

part of the

the color bar will not

and movie houses

Beyond

that,

The

class

because of

yields in places, the insult of what

still

in

color bar in this nation

remains

half-free. fall,

Negroes

even more sharply than now, and the main mass

working

loosen. Rich

of segregation in education

results?

the whole caste structure finally does

into classes

of some of

stop in the higher-priced

the bars.

costs, the wall

all this,

will

When

this,

costly restaurants; the theaters

the North and border states

may be

may deprive Negroes

main mass of the group. The bar may bend and

Negroes may hotels

it

will will

be divided

become

a

of the nation and the world, which will surely go

socialist.

625

The

Vast Miracle of

China Today

I

have traveled widely on

Save South America and India,

much But

I

my first trip

this earth since

of its backward regions.

I

to

Europe 67

years ago.

have seen most of the civilized world and

Many leading nations

I

have

visited repeatedly.

have never seen a nation which so amazed and touched

me as China in

1959.

have seen more impressive buildings but no more pleasing architecture; I have seen greater display of wealth, and more massive power; I have seen I

better

equipped railways and boats and

have never seen a nation where knowledge; where daily

power and love of

cal

and

not a

style. It

I

is

more showy automobiles; but

I

nature was so abreast of scientific

of everyday people was so outstripping mechaniso triumphing over

life

human

greed and envy and

see in

a sense of

human

meannesses and of a people

unexampled

human

China today. matter of mere numbers and

selfishness as It is

life

vastly

full

size;

of wealth and power; of beauty

nature free of

its

most hurtful and

terrible

of joy and faith and marching on in a unison

Holland, Belgium, Britain and France; and simply inconceivable in the United States.

A typical,

in

ignorant American put

way in Moscow: '‘But how can you make it go without niggers?” In China he would have said: “But see them work:” dragging, hauling, lifting, pulling — and yet smiling at each other, greeting neighbors

who

it

this

ride by in autos, helping strangers

“niggers”; seeking knowledge, following leaders

and

their certain destiny.

which From

I

Whence comes

this

never saw before or believed possible?

the National Guardian, June 8, 1959.

626

even

and believing miracle of

in

if

they are

themselves

human

nature,

The Vast Miracle of China Today

was ten weeks

I

China. There they celebrated

in

my

91st birthday with a

thoughtfulness and sincerity that would simply be impossible in America even among my own colored people. Ministers of state were there, writers and actors

artists,

and professional men;

and children playing fairy tales. Anna Louise Strong came looking happy, busy and secure. There was a whole singers

table of other Americans, exiled for daring to

and

skills I

Kunming and Nanking.

gorges; passed through

and

Hankow and

Peking, Shanghai,

ngtu,

for their

loyalty.

traveled 5,000 miles, by railway, boat, plane

cities:

China; integrated

visit

colleges, lectured

its

I

villages

rode

and

its

its

and

sisters;

auto.

I

its

communes.

and broadcast to the world.

the great

all

Canton, Chungking, Che-

vast rivers tearing

sat in

saw

I

visited

I

its

through mighty visited

its

schools

minority groups.

was on the borders of Tibet when the revolt occurred. I spent four hours with Mao Tse-tung and dined twice with Chou En-lai, the tireless Prime Minister I

of this nation of 680 million souls.

The people and

laborers,

of the land

I

scrubwomen and

homes of the high and

in the

saw: the workers, the factory hands, the farmers servants.

I

went to

the low; and always

I

theaters

and

saw a happy people; people

with faith that need no church nor priest and laughs gaily

King In

fools the hosts of all

dislike



my I

Heaven and overthrows the

wandering,

who

for

I

90 years

never in

felt

restaurants, sat

when

the

Monkey

angels.

the touch or breath of insult or even

America scarcely ever saw

a day without

some

expression of hate for “niggers.”

What is the secret of China in the second half of the 20th Century? It is that the vast majority of a billion human beings have been convinced that human some of its darkest recesses can be changed, if change is necessary. China knows, as no other people know, to what depths human meanness nature in

can go.

weep

American Negroes, as I saw through what indignities and repressions and cruelties they had passed; but as I have read Chinese history in these last months and had it explained to me stripped of Anglo-Saxon lies, I know that no depths of Negro slavery in America have plumbed such abysses as the Chinese have seen for 2,000 years and more. I

used

to

for

They have seen

starvation

and

and murder; rape and

prostitution; sale

and

opium and gin, for converting the “Heathen.” This oppression and contempt came not only from Tartars, Mongolians, British, French, Cermans and Americans, but from the Chislavery of children;

religion cloaked in

nese themselves: Mandarins and warlords, capitalists and murdering thieves like

Chiang Kai-shek; Kuomintang

socialists

abroad.

627

and

intellectuals

educated

Radical Thought: Socialism and

Communism

and has been transformed and marches on. She is not ignored by the United States. She ignores the United States and leaps forward. What did it? What furnished the motive power and how was it Despite

China

all this,

lives,

applied? First

it

was the belief in himself and in

He plunged

people by a

man

Sun Yatsen.

like

on, blind and unaided, repulsed by Britain and America, but

welcomed by erred and

his

Russia.

lost,

and

Then

at last

Chiang Kai-shek, with

its

efforts

toward socialism, which wobbled forward,

was bribed by America and Britain and betrayed by leaders

murdered and

its

aims misunderstood, when

not deliberately lied about.

to

Then came the Long March from feudalism, past capitalism and socialism communism in our day. Mao Tse-tung, Chou En-lai, Chu Teh and a half

dozen others undertook by

infinite patience

and not merely the

to lead a nation

and above

elite

all

by example, by starving and fighting;

by making a nation believe that the people

— the workers in factory, street, and field — composed

the real nation. Others have said this often, but

no nation has

tried

it

like the

Union and China. And on the staggering and bitter effort of the Soviets, beleaguered by all Western civilization, and yet far-seeing enough to help weaker China even before a still weak Russia was safe — on this vast pyramid has arisen the saving Soviet

nation of this stumbling, murdering, hating world.

China the people — the laboring people, the people who in most lands are the doormats on which the reigning thieves and murdering rulers walk, leading their painted and jeweled prostitutes — the people walk and boast. These people of the slums and gutters and kitchens are the Chinese nation today. This the Chinese believe and on this belief they toil and sweat and In

cheer.

They ened

believe this and for the last ten years their belief has been strength-

until today they follow their leaders

deceived them. Their

officials are incorruptible, their

their artisans are reliable, their workers day’s

because these leaders have never

work and even work overtime

if

who dig and

merchants are honest,

haul and

their state asks

it,

lift

do an honest

for they are the State;

they are China.

A

kindergarten, meeting in the once Forbidden City, was

magnificence of

this

palace and told: “Your fathers built

this,

shown the

but

now

it

is

And then, pointing across the Ten An Men square to the vast building of the new Halls of Assembly, the speaker added: “Your fathers are building new palaces for you; enjoy them and guard them for yourselves and your children. They belong to you!”

yours; preserve

it.”

China has no rank nor

classes;

her universities grant no degrees; her

628

The Vast Miracle of China Today

government awards no medals. She has no blue book of ''society.” But she has leaders of learning and genius, scientists of renown, artisans of skill and millions who know and believe this and follow where these men lead. This is the joy of this nation,

its

high belief and

its

unfaltering hope.

China is no Utopia. Fifth Avenue has better shops where the rich can buy and the whores parade. Detroit has more and better cars. The best American housing outstrips the Chinese and Chinese

women

are not nearly as well-

dressed as the guests of the Waldorf-Astoria. But the Chinese worker

He

is

happy.

has exorcized the Creat Fear that haunts the West: the fear of losing his

job; the fear of falling sick; the fear of accident; the fear of inability to

educate

his children; the fear of daring to take a vacation.

catastrophe Americans skimp and save,

To guard against such cheat and steal, gamble and arm for

murder.

The

Soviet citizen, the Czech, the Pole, the Hungarian have kicked out the

stooges of America

East

and the hoodlums

Germans no longer

set to exploit the peasants.

fear these disasters;

high above these fears and laugh with

They

will

not be rich in old age.

be healed. They ago.

will

all

the Chinese

sit

joy.

They

will

not enjoy sickness but they will

not starve as thousands of Chinese did only a generation

They fear neither

Tse-tung told me.

and above

They and the

flood nor epidemic.

War

for

China

is

fear war, as

Mao

China can defend

itself

They do not even

a "Paper Tiger.”

and back of China stands the unassailable might of the Soviet Union. Env)' and class hate is disappearing in China. Does your neighbor have better pay and higher position than you? He has this because of greater ability or better education,

and more education

is

open

to

you and compulsory

for

your children.

The young married couple do

not fear children.

The mother

has pre-natal

Her wage and job are safe. Nursery and kindergarten take care of the child and it is welcome, not to pampered luxury but to good food, constant medical care and education for his highest ability. All this is not yet perfect. Here and there it fails, falls short and falters; but it is so often and so widely true, that China believes, lives on realized hope, follows its leaders and sings: "O, Mourner, get up offa your knees.” The women of China are free. They wear pants so that they can walk, climb and dig; and climb and dig they do. They are not dressed simply for sex indulgence or beauty parades. They occupy positions from ministers of state to locomotive engineers, lawyers, doctors, clerks and laborers. They are escaping “household drudgery”; they are strong and healthy and beautiful not simply of leg and false bosom but of real brain and brawn. care.

629

Radical Thought: Socialism and

Communism

Wuhan, stood in one of the greatest steelworks of the world. A crane which moved a hundred tons loomed above. said, “My God, Shirley, look up In

I

I

there!” vast

Alone

in the

engine-room

sat a girl

with ribboned braids, running the

machine.

You won’t believe this, because you never saw anything like it; and if the State Department has its way, you never will. Let Life lie about communes; and the State Department shed crocodile tears over ancestral tombs. Let Hong Kong wire its lies abroad. Let “Divine Slavery” persist in Tibet until China kills it. The truth is there and I saw it. America makes or can make no article that China is not either making or can make, and make better and cheaper. I saw its export exposition in Canton: a whole building of watches, radios, electric apparatus, cloth in silk and wool and cotton; embroidery, pottery, dishes, shoes, telephone sets. There were five floors of goods which the world needs and is buying in increasing quantities, except the ostrich United States, whose ships rot. Fifteen times I have crossed the Atlantic and once the Pacific. I have seen the world. But never so vast and glorious a miracle as China.

630

Application for Membership in

C ommunist

the

Party of the

United States of America

On this first day of October, in the

Communist

coming

I

96 1

,

1

am applying for admission to membership

Party of the United States.

to this conclusion,

In college

1

heard the

but

name

at last

my mind

I

have been long and slow in is

settled.

of Karl Marx, but read none of his works, nor

heard them explained. At the University of Berlin, thinkers

who had

I

much

heard

of those

answered the theories of Marx, but again we did not study what Marx himself had said. Nevertheless, I attended meetings of definitively

the Socialist Party and considered myself a Socialist.

On my return

to

America,

I

taught and studied for sixteen years.

the theory of Socialism and studied the organized social

Negroes; but

still I

New York as an The

neither read or heard

official

of the

new

much

life

of Marxism.

I

explored

of American

Then

I

came

to

NAACP and editor of the Crisis Magazine.

NAACP was capitalist orientated and expected support from rich philan-

thropists.

But

it

had a strong

element

Socialist

in

its

leadership in persons like

Mary

Ovington, William English Walling and Charles Edward Russell. Following their advice,

I

joined the Socialist Pary in 1911.

practical socialist politics

and

unwilling to vote the Socialist

This was contrary

in

I

knew then nothing

the campaign of 1912,

ticket,

but advised Negroes

to Socialist Party rules

I

of

found myself

to vote for

Wilson.

and consequently I resigned from the

Socialist Party.

For the next twenty years

and

my people.

From

Worker,

I

I

tried to

develop a political way of life for myself

attacked the Democrats and Republicans for

November

26, 1961.

631

monopoly and

Radical Thought: Socialism and

disfranchisement of Negroes;

Southern Negro members;

I

I

Communism

attacked the Socialists for trying to segregate

praised the racial attitudes of the

Communists,

but opposed their tactics in the case of the Scottsboro boys and their advocacy of a Negro

At the same time

state.

I

began

to study Karl

Marx and

the

Communists; I read Das Kapital and other Communist literature; I hailed the Russian Revolution of 1917, but was puzzled at the contradictory news from Russia.

Finally in 1926,

1

began

a

new

effort;

1

Communist lands.

visited

I

went

to

Union in 1926, 1936, 1949 and 1959; I saw the nation develop. I visited East Germany, Czechoslovakia and Poland. 1 spent ten weeks in China, traveling all over the land. Then this summer, I rested a month in Rumania. 1 was early convinced that Socialism was an excellent way of life, but I the Soviet

thought

it

might be reached by various methods. For Russia

she had chosen the only way open to her

at the time.

1

I

was convinced

saw Scandinavia

choosing a different method, half-way between Socialism and Capitalism. In the United States

I

saw Consumers Cooperation

Socialism, while England, France and

as a

path from Capitalism to

Germany developed

in the

same

own way. After the depression and the Second World War, I was disillusioned. The Progressive movement in the United States failed. The Cold War started. Capitalism called Communism a crime. direction in their

Today

I

have reached a firm conclusion:

Capitalism cannot reform sal selfishness

itself; it is

can bring social good

doomed to self-destruction. No univer-

to all.

Communism — the effort to give all men what they need and to ask of each the best they can contribute — this is the only way of human life. It is a difficult and hard end

to

reach



it

has and will

make

triumphantly on in education and science, in

mistakes, but today

home and

triumph.

The

I

want

Communism

help to bring that day.

path of the American

United States with a It

to

marches

food, with increased

freedom of thought and deliverance from dogma. In the end will

it

real

Communist

Party

is

clear:

It

will provide the

Third Party and thus restore democracy

to this land.

will call for:

1.

Public ownership of natural resources and of

2.

Public control of transportation and communications.

3.

Abolition of poverty and limitation of personal income.

4.

No

5.

Social medicine, with hospitalization

6.

Free education for

7.

Training for jobs and jobs for

all captial.

exploitation of labor.

all. all.

632

and care of the

old.

Application for Membership in the

8.

10. 9.

Communist

Party of the United States of America

Discipline for growth and reform.

Freedom under

No

dogmatic

law.

religion.

These aims are not crimes. They are practiced increasingly over the world. No nation can call itself free which does not allow its citizens to work for these ends.

633

XIII

Africa, Pan-Africa,

and Imperialism

D

u Bois was the premier apostle of the gospel of the solidarity of peoples of

and of the cultural and political links to Africa of Americans of African descent. Speaking to the delegates of the Pan-African Conference, meeting in London, July 1900, he made his most famous prediction in “To the Nations of color,

the World”:

“The problem of the twentieth century

colour line, the question as to

made,

far differences

the problem of the

of race

.

.

.

are going to be

hereafter, the basis of denying to over half the world the right of sharing

to their

Wlien

how

is

utmost ability the opportunities and privileges of modern

Du

civilization.”

summarized the visionary goals and modest achievements of the Pan-African Congresses more than a quarter-century later (four by his count, but five in all), Du Bois had no need to repeat a prophecy that had proven to be deadly accurate. He had already spelled out the inevitable global consequences of the color-line problem in “The African Roots of the War,” a Bois

trenchant essay in the

May

1915 Atlantic Monthly that anticipated Lenin’s

and imperialism. “The Negros Fatherland” (1917), Me?” (1940), and “Little Portraits of Africa” (1924) are

analysis of capitalism

“What

Is

Africa to

representative of the large corpus of writings about the historic, cultural,

contemporary ings such as

(1947),

Du

and

importance of the African continent. In postwar writ“The Disfranchised Colonies” (1945) and “Britain and Africa” political

Bois exposed the

economic

would famously characterize

as the

history of what another radical scholar

European underdevelopment of Africa.

But an independent Africa did not mean

for

Du

Bois a continent from which

the European populations

present Africa are

Autonomy”

would have been expelled. “The black leaders of not fools,” he admonished in “Whites in Africa After Negro

(1962); the revenge of reverse racism

mindlessly catastrophic.

637

would

be,

he believed,

> r



y

To the Nations of the World

In the metropolis of the

modern

world, in this the closing year of the nine-

teenth century, there has been assembled a congress of African blood, to deliberate solemnly of the darker races of mankind.

problem of the colour

upon

men and women

of

the present situation and outlook

The problem

of the twentieth century

line, the question as to

how

far differences

is

the

of race,

which show themselves chiefly in the colour of the skin and the texture of the hair, are going to be made, hereafter, the basis of denying to over half the world the right of sharing to their utmost ability the opportunities and privileges of

modern

To be

civilisation.

sure, the darker races are to-day the least

advanced

in culture

according to European standards. This has not, however, always been the case in the past, and certainly the world’s history, both ancient and modern, has given

many

est races of

instances of

no despicable

ability

and capacity among the black-

men.

In any case, the

modern world must need remember

that in this age,

when

the ends of the world are being brought so near together, the millions of black men in Africa, America, and the Islands of the Sea, not to speak of the brown

and yellow myriads elsewhere, are bound to have great influence upon the world in the future, by reason of sheer numbers and physical contact. If now the world of culture bends itself towards giving Negroes and other dark men the largest and broadest opportunity for education and self-development, then world this contact and influence is bound to have a beneficial effect upon the

world

is

by reason of carelessness, prejudice, greed to be exploited and ravished and degraded,

the results must be deplorable,

if

not

and hasten human

and

From

progress.

injustice, the black

But

if,

fatal,

not simply to them, but to the high

the Report of the Pan-African Conference, held on the 23rd, 24th,

and 2Sth

July,

1900, at

Lane, W.C., Westminster Town Hall, Westminster, S.W. [London]. Headquarters 61 and 62, Chancery

London, England [1900], pp. 10-12.

639

Africa, Pan-Africa,

ideals of justice, civilisation

and Imperialism

freedom, and culture which a thousand years of Christian

have held before Europe.

And now,

therefore, to these ideals of civilisation, to the broader

of the followers of the Prince of Peace, we, the

now solemnly

world congress assembled, do

men and women

appeal:

humanity

of Africa in



Let the world take no backward step in that slow but sure progress which has successively refused to let the spirit of class, of caste, of privilege, or of birth,

debar from

like liberty

and the pursuit of happiness

a striving

human

soul.

Let not mere colour or race be a feature of distinction drawn between white

and black men, regardless of worth or

ability.

Let not the natives of Africa be sacrificed to the greed of gold, their liberties taken away, their family

life

debauched,

their just aspirations repressed,

and

avenues of advancement and culture taken from them. Let not the cloak of Christian missionary enterprise be allowed in the

economic exploitation and whose chief fault has been

future, as so often in the past, to hide the ruthless political downfall of less

reliance

on the plighted

developed nations,

faith

of the Christian church.

Let the British nation, the

modern champion

first

of Negro freedom,

hasten to crown the work of Wilberforce, and Clarkson, and Buxton, and

Sharpe. Bishop Colenso, and Livingstone, and give, as soon as practicable, the rights of responsible

West

government

to the black colonies of Africa

and the

Indies.

Let not the

America:

may

spirit

of Carrison, Phillips, and Douglas wholly die out in

the cpnscience of a great nation

rise

and rebuke

all

dishonesty

and unrighteous oppression toward the American Negro, and grant to him the right of franchise, security of person and property, and generous recognition of the great work he has accomplished in a generation toward raising nine

human beings from slavery to manhood. Cerman Empire, and the French Republic,

millions of

Let the

remember and

true to their great past,

that the true worth of colonies lies in their prosperity

that justice, impartial alike to black

and white,

is

the

and

first

progress,

element of

prosperity.

Let the

and

let

its

Congo

F"ree State

become

prosperity be counted not simply in

happiness and true advancement of

Negro State of the world, cash and commerce, but in the

a great central

its

black people.

Let the nations of the World respect the integrity and independence of the free

Negro

States of Abyssinia, Liberia, Hayti, etc.,

and

let

the inhabitants of

these States, the independent tribes of Africa, the Negroes of the

West Indies

and America, and the black subjects of all nations take courage, strive ceaselessly, and fight bravely, that they may prove to the world their incontestable right to be counted

among

the great brotherhood of mankind.

640

To the Nations of the World

Thus we appeal with boldness and confidence civilised world, trusting in the

justice of our age, for a

wide

spirit

to the

Great Powers of the

of humanity, and the deep sense of

generous recognition of the righteousness of our cause.

Alexander Walters

(Bishop),

President^ Pan-African Association.

Henry

B.

Brown,

Vice-President.

H. Sylvester Williams,

General Secretary.

W. E. Burghardt Du Bois, Chairman Committee on Address.

641

The African Roots

of the

War

Roman proconsul; and he voiced the verdict of forty centuries. Yet there are those who would write world history and leave out this most marvelous of continents. Particularly to-day most men ‘Semper novi quid ex Africa/ cried the

assume

that Africa lies far afield

from the centres of our burning

social

problems, and especially from our present problem of World War. Yet in a very real sense Africa

which we have

civilization

the

Dark Continent

is

a

terrible overturning of

and these words seek

lived to see;

hidden the

are

prime cause of this

to

show how

in

not simply of war to-day but of the

roots,

menace of wars to-morrow. Always Africa world-old thing. earliest,

is

giving us something

On

its

black

bosom

new

or

some metempsychosis of

arose one of the earliest,

of self-protecting civilizations, and grew so mightily that

nishes superlatives to thinking

if

a

not the

it still

fur-

and speaking men. Out of its darker and more

we may credit many recent scientists, the first welding of iron, and we know that agriculture and trade flourished there when remote

forest fastnesses,

Europe was

Greece

Germanic it

some of its

Great Britain. As

Christianity

and

human empire

has found

to

if

a wilderness.

Nearly every spiritual,

came,

became

that has arisen in the world, material

greatest crises

Mommsen

on

says,

and

this

continent of Africa, from

‘It

was through Africa that

the religion of the world.’ In Africa the last flood of

invasions spent itself within hearing of the last gasp of Byzantium,

was again through Africa that Islam came

conqueror and

to play

its

great role of

civilizer.

With the Renaissance and the widened world of modern thought, Africa came no less suddenly with her new old gift. Shakespeare’s Ancient Pistol cries



F’rom Atlantic Monthly, 115

(May

1915): 707-714.

642

The African Roots of the War

A I

So much

foutre for the world,

and worldlings

speak of Africa, and golden

for the past;

the rising riches of Africa

and now

joys.

.

.

.

Conference

to-day: the Berlin

among the

base!

to apportion

white peoples met on the fifteenth day of

November, 1884. Eleven days earlier, three Germans left Zanzibar (whither they had gone secretly disguised as mechanics), and before the Berlin Conference had finished its deliberations they had annexed to Germany an area over whole German Empire

half as large again as the

dramatic suddenness was

this

in

Europe. Only

in

its

undisguised robbery of the land of seven million

methods by which Great Britain and Erance got four million square miles each, Portugal three quarters of a million, and Italy and Spain smaller but substantial areas. natives different from the

The methods by which ible

this

continent has been stolen have been contempt-

and dishonest byond expression. Lying

assassination, mutilation, rape,

glishman,

way

in

and

German Erenchman, and

torture have

its

ears

of rum, murder,

marked the progress of En-

Belgian on the dark continent.

which the world has been able

deliberately opping

treaties, rivers

to

endure the horrible

The tale

only is

by

and changing the subject of conversation while

the deviltry went on. It all

Many

began, singularly enough, like the present war, with Belgium.

remember Stanley s great solution of the puzzle of Central Africa when he traced the mighty Congo sixteen hundred miles from Nyangwe to the sea. Suddenly the world knew that here lay the key to the riches of Central Africa. of us

It

stirred uneasily,

but Leopold of Belgium was

was the Congo Eree State with

all its

— God

first

on

his feet,

and the

result

Congo Eree State, Christianity, and Commerce,

save the mark! But the

magniloquent heralding of Peace,

degenerating into murder, mutilation and downright robbery, differed only in

degree and concentration from the tale of all Africa in

this

rape of a continent

mangled by the slave trade. That sinister traffic, on which the British Empire and the American Republic w'ere largely built, cost black Africa no less than 100,000,000 souls, the wreckage of its political and social life, and left the continent in precisely that state of helplessness which invites already furiously

aggression and exploitation. ‘Color’

onymous with other

name

Thus to

inferiority,

for bestiality

‘Negro’ lost

became its

in

the world’s thought syn-

capitalization,

and Africa was an-

and barbarism.

the world began to invest in color prejudice.

The

‘Color Line’ began

pay dividends. For indeed, while the exploration of the valley of the

was the occasion of the scramble Prussian

War

for Africa, the

cause lay deeper.

The

Congo Eranco-

turned the eyes of those wdio sought power and dominion aw'ay

from Europe. Already England was

in Africa,

643

cleaning aw ay the debris of the

Africa, Pan-Africa,

and Imperialism

and half consciously groping toward the new Imperialism. France, humiliated and impoverished, looked toward a new northern African empire

slave trade

Germany began to see the dawning of a new day, and, shut out from America by the Monroe Doctrine, looked to Asia and Africa for colonies. Portugal sought anew to

sweeping from the Atlantic

make good her claim

to the

Sea.

More

slowly

her ancient African realm; and thus a continent

to

was

a tenth of the land in 1875,

where Europe claimed but

more

Red

in twenty-five

years practically absorbed.

Why was this? What was the new call for dominion? It must have been strong, for consider a

moment the

desperate flames of war that have shot up in Africa

new call for dominion? The answer to this riddle we shall find in the economic changes in Europe. Remember what the nineteenth and twentieth centuries have meant to

in

.

.

.

organized industry in European civilization. Slowly the divine right of the few

determine economic income and distribute the goods and services of the world has been questioned and curtailed. We called the process Revolution in to

the eighteenth century, advancing ization of

Wealth

Democracy

in the twentieth.

the same: the dipping of

is

But whatever we

more and grimier hands

nation, until to-day only the

determining income

in the nineteenth,

stubborn

ifltra

call

it,

the

Social-

movement

is

into the wealth-bag of the to see that

fail

and

the next inevitable step to

democracy

Democracy

in

in political

power.

With the waning of the possibility of the Big Fortune, gathered by starvation wage and boundless exploitation of ones weaker and poorer fellows at home, arose more magnificently the dream of exploitation abroad. Always, of course, the individual merchant had at his own risk and in his own way tapped the riches of foreign lands. Later, special trading monopolies had entered the field

and founded empires

home demanded

over-seas.

a share in this

century, the laborer at

home

is

Soon, however, the mass of merchants

golden stream; and

finally, in

demanding and beginning

at

the tw'entieth

to receive a part of

his share.

The lated.

theory of this

new democratic despotism

Most philosophers

ible tide of

has not been clearly formu-

see the ship of state launched

on the broad,

irresist-

democracy, with only delaying eddies here and there: others,

looking closer, are more disturbed. Are we, they ask, reverting to aristocracy

and depotism

— the

surely they cannot It is

this

rule of might?

fail

to see

They

cry out

and then rub

strengthening democracy

all

their eyes, for

about them?

paradox which has confounded philanthropists, curiously betrayed

the Socialists, and reconciled the Imperialists, and captains of industry to any

644

The African Roots of the War

amount

of ‘Democracy.’

this

It is

paradox which allows

America the most

in

democracy to go hand in hand in its very centres with increased aristocracy and hatred toward darker races, and which excuses and defends an inhumanity that does not shrink from the public burning of rapid advance of

human

beings.

Yet the paradox

is

to share the spoil of exploiting ‘chinks

merchant prince, or the that

composed of united

capital

and

and

excluded

restless

his just share

is

it

and

sure, as large a share as they

large

monopoly, or even the employing

aristocratic

exploiting the world:

is

workingman has been asked and niggers.’ It is no longer simply the

easily explained: the white

new democratic

the nation; a

is

labor.

The

class,

nation

laborers are not yet getting, to be

and there are

want or

will get,

classes.

But the

still

laborer’s equity

a matter of time, intelligence

and

at the

bottom

recognized,

is

skillful negotiation.

Such nations it is that rule the modern world. Their national bond is no mere sentimental patriotism, loyalty, or ancestor-worship. It is increased wealth, power, and luxury for all classes on a scale the world never saw before. Never before was the average citizen of England, France, and Germany so rich, with

such splendid prospects of greater

Whence comes

this

new

riches.

wealth and on what does

accumulation de-

its

comes primarily from the darker nations of the world— Asia and Africa, South and Central America, the West Indies and the islands of the South Seas. There are still, we may well believe, many parts of white countries like Russia and North America, not to mention Europe itself, where the older pend?

It

exploitation

still

holds. But the knell has

sounded

faint

and

far,

even there. In

the lands of darker folk, however, no knell has sounded. Chinese, East Indians, Negroes,

and South American Indians, are by

governance by white folk and economic subjection therance of

this

and

religion.

trine of the natural inferiority of most

‘Christian brotherhood’ as

Like

all

it

to

consent

them. To the

for

fur-

highly profitable economic dictum has been brought every

available resource of science

any time want

common

to

Thus

arises the astonishing

men to the few, and the

meaning anything

that

one of the

doc-

interpretation of ‘brothers’

may at

mean.

world-schemes, however,

this

one

is

not quite complete. First of all,

yellow Japan has apparently escaped the cordon of this color bar. This disconcerting and dangerous to white hegemony. join heart

and soul with the whites against the

blacks, well

rest

If,

is

of course, Japan would

of the yellows, browns, and

and good. There are even good-natured attempts

to

prove the

and there are signs that Japan does not dream of a world governed mainly by white men. This is the ‘Yellow Peril,’ and it may be necessary, as the German Emperor and Japanese ‘Aryan,’ provided they act ‘white.’ But blood

645

is

thick,

Africa, Pan-Africa,

many

white Americans think, to

tuous nation which

Then,

too, the

demands

and Imperialism

world-crusade against

start a

this

presump-

'white’ treatment.

Chinese have recently shown unexpected

signs of indepen-

dence and autonomy, which may possibly make it necessary to take them into account a few decades hence. As a result, the problem in Asia has resolved itself into a

race for 'spheres’ of

economic

'influence,’

each provided with a

more or less 'open door’ for business opportunity. This reduces the danger of open clash between European nations, and gives the yellow folk such chance for desperate unarmed resistance as was shown by China’s repulse of the Six Nations of Bankers. There is still hope among some whites that conservative North China and the radical South may in time come to blows and allow actual white dominion.

One

thing, however,

is

certain: Africa

signs of self-consciousness that sinia

futile steps

tually stopped (save

at

prostrate.

There

present be heeded.

at least are

To be

few

sure, Abys-

America and the West Indies Negroes have toward freedom; but such steps have been pretty effec-

must be wheedled, and

attempted

need

is

in

through the breech of 'miscegenation’), although the ten

million Negroes in the United States need, to

many men’s minds,

careful

watching and ruthless repression.

European mind has worked, and worked the more feverishly because Africa is the Land of the Twentieth Century. The world knows something of the gold and diamonds of South Africa, the cocoa of Angola and Nigeria, the rubber and ivory of the Congo, and the palm oil of the West Coast. But does the ordinary citizen realize the extraordinary economic There can be advances of Africa and, too, of black Africa, in recent years? no doubt of the economic possibilities of Africa in the near future. There are

Thus

the white

.

.

.

not only the well-known and traditional products, but boundless chances in a

hundred

different directions,

and above

who, could they once be reduced

all,

there

is

to the docility

a

throng of human beings

and steadiness of Chinese

and eighteenth century European laborers, would spoil exceeding the gold-haunted dreams of the most

coolies or of seventeenth

furnish to their masters a

modern

of Imperialists.

This, then,

began

in

is

the real secret of that desperate struggle for Africa

1877 and

is

now

culminating.

Economic dominion

which

outside Africa

and we were on the verge of the partition of Asia when Asiatic shrewdness warded it off. America was saved from direct political dominion by the Monroe Doctrine. Thus, more and more, the Imperialists has, of course, played

its

part,

have concentrated on Africa.

The

greater the concentration the

more deadly

646

the rivalry.

From Fashoda

The African Roots of the War

been applied

to .\gadir, repeatedly the spark has

and

a general conflagration narrowly averted.

to the

We

European magazine

speak of the Balkans as the

storm-centre of Europe and the cause of war, but this

habit.

The

Balkans are convenient for occasions, but the ownership of materials and

men

in the darker

other

world

the real prize that

is

is

is

mere

setting the nations of Europe at

each

throats to-day.

s

The recent

present world war rise

of

armed

is,

then, the result of jealousies engendered by the

national associations of labor and capital

whose aim

is

the exploitation of the wealth of the world mainly outside the European circle of nations.

These

associations,

grown jealous and suspicious

at the division

of

the spoils of trade-empire, are fighting to enlarge their respective shares; they

look for expansion, not in Europe but in Asia, and particularly in Africa. ‘We

want no inch of French was ‘unable

The

territory,’ said

Germany

to give’ similar assurances as to

difficulties of this imperial

to

France

movement

England, but

Germany

in Africa.

are internal as well as external.

Successful aggression in economic expansion calls for a close union between

and labor

capital

at

simply for wages but industry,

make

peased by

Now

home.

for conditions of

peace

industrial

all sorts

the rising

demands of the white

work and

difficult.

a voice in the

laborer, not

conduct of

The workingmen have been

ap-

of essays in state socialism, on the one hand, and on the

other hand by public threats of competition by colored labor. By threatening to

Ghina and Mexico, by threatening to hire Negro well as by old-age pensions and accident insurance, we

send English capital

laborers in America, as

gain industrial peace at

to

home

at the

mightier cost of war abroad.

In addition to these national war-engendering jealousies there

is

a

more

movement arising from the attempt to unite labor and capital in worldwide freebooting. Democracy in economic organization, while an acknowl-

subtle

edged

ideal,

is

to-day working itself out by admitting to a share in the spoils of

capital only the aristocracy of labor

The

cannier workingmen.

— the more intelligent and shrewder and

ignorant, unskilled,

and

restless

still

form a

large,

threatening, and, to a growing extent, revolutionary group in advanced countries.

The

resultant jealousies

the color line. will take

Negroes

We

must

and

bitter hatreds

fight the

our bread and butter. will take

and ready action

our

jobs. All

that singular

tend continually to fester along

Ghinese, the laborer argues, or the Ghinese

We

must keep Negroes

in their places, or

over tbe world there leaps to articulate speech

assumption that

if

white

men do

not throttle

colored men, then Ghina, India, and Africa will do to Europe what Europe

had done and seeks

On

to

do

to

them.

the other hand, in the minds of yellow, brown, and black

647

men

the

and Imperialism

Africa, Pan-Africa,

brutal truth

is

man

clearing: a white

advantage beckons and behave

he pleases; the black or colored

as

being more and more confined to these parts of the world where

economic, and

climatic, historical,

and most

easily

political reasons

dominated by Europe

where

privileged to go to any land

is

for

is

most

man

is

life for

difficult to live

Europe’s gain.

who desire peace and the civilization of all men? Hitherto the peace movement has confined itself chiefly to figures about the cost of war and platitudes on humanity. What do nations care about the cost of

What, then,

we

are

to do,

and gunpowder they can gain a thousand millions in diamonds and cocoa? How can love of humanity appeal as a motive to nations whose love of luxury is built on the inhuman exploitation of human beings, and who, especially in recent years, have been war,

by spending

if

a

few hundred millions in

taught to regard these

meeting of peace

human

beings, as

inhuman?

societies in St. Louis, saying,

prejudice as a prime cause of war?’

The

steel

I

appealed to the

‘Should you not discuss

last

racial

secretary was sorry but was unwilling

to introduce controversial matters!

We,

then,

who want

peace, must remove the real causes of war.

extended gradually our conception of democracy beyond our social

We

have

class to all

social classes in

our nation; we have gone further and extended our demo-

cratic ideals not

simply to

all

classes of

nations of our blood and lineage

we want

real

our own nation, but

to those of other

— to what we call ‘European’ civilization.

peace and lasting culture, however, we must go further.

If

We must

extend the democratic ideal to the yellow, brown and black peoples.

To

say this,

is

to

hopelessness. Impossible! social

men a look of blank we are told, and for some many reasons — scientific,

evoke on the faces of modern

and what not — that argument

quickly.

Suppose we have

to

is

useless.

choose betu^een

But this

let

us not conclude too

unspeakably inhuman

outrage on decency and intelligence and religion which

War and

men

we

call the

World

human, sentient, responsible beings? We have sold them as cattle. We are working them as beasts of burden. We shall not drive war from this world until we treat them as free and equal citizens in a world-democracy of all races and nations. Impossible? Democracy is a method of doing the impossible. It is the only method yet discovered of making the education and development of all men a matter of all men’s the attempt to treat black

desperate desire.

compelling the

putting firearms in the hands of a child with the object of

It is

child’s neighbors to teach

mate uses of a dangerous other and

less costly

as

tool

him, not only the

but the uses of himself in

ways of accomplishing

this?

all

real

things.

There may be

in

and

legiti-

Are there

some Better

world. But for a world just emerging from the rough chains of an almost

648

The African Roots of the War

and faced by the temptation of luxury and indulgence through the enslaving of defenseless men, there is hut one adequate method of salvation — the giving of democratic weapons of self-defense to the defenseuniversal poverty,

less.

Nor need we quibble over those ideas, — wealth, education, and political power — soil which we have so forested with claim and counter-claim that we see nothing for the woods.

What war

to

is

the primitive peoples of Africa and the world need and must have

be abolished

perfectly clear:

is

To-day Africa

First: land.

natural resources.

.

.

if

is

being enslaved by the theft of her land and

.

we must train native races in modern civilization. This can be done. Modern methods of educating children, honestly and effectively applied, would make modern, civilized nations out of the vast majority of Secondly:

human

beings on earth to-day.

Lastly, the principle of

The

races.

.

.

.

home

rule

ruling of one people for another people

This kind of despotism has been in disguised.

But the brute

Can such

a situation bring

disarmament Political

morrow,

it

fact remains: the

power to-day

may give

are without

it

later days

white

s

whim

or gain

must

more and more

man

and

to groups, nations,

is

stop.

skillfully

ruling black Africa.

.

.

.

peace? Will any amount of European concord or

settle this injustice?

starve,

but the weapon

is

to force

economic power. To-

us spiritual vision and artistic sensibility. To-day,

or tries to give us bread

them

must extend

and

and

butter,

starvation

and those is

the

it

gives us

classes or nations or races

weapon of the white world

to

who

reduce

to slavery.

We

are calling for

concord

will

mean

European concord

satisfaction with, or

the spoils of world-dominion. After

all,

to-day; but at the

acquiescence

utmost European

in, a

given division of

European disarmament cannot go

below the necessity of defending the aggressions of the white against the blacks and browns and yellows. war. Eirst,

renewed jealousy

agreed upon,

Who

scraps

left

this will arise three

perpetual dangers of

any division of colonies or spheres of influence

any future time the present division comes to seem unfair. Africa in the early nineteenth century? Let England have the

if

cared for

at

Erom

at

from the golden

feast of the slave trade.

But

in the twentieth

The end was war. Hiese scraps looked too tempting to Germany. Secondly: war will come from the revolutionary revolt of the lowest workers. The greater the international jealousies, the greater the corresponding costs of armament and the more difficult to fulfill the promises of industrial democcentury?

racy in advanced countries. Einally, the colored peoples will not always

649

Africa, Pan-Africa,

submit passively

When

to foreign

and Imperialism

domination. To some

people deserve liberty they fight

a

for

it

this

is

a lightly tossed truism.

and get

it,

say such philoso-

making war a regular, necessary step to liberty. Colored people are familiar with this complacent judgment. They endure the contemptuous treatment meted out by whites to those not ‘strong’ enough to be free. These nations and races, composing as they do a vast majority of humanity, are going to endure this treatment just as long as they must and not a moment longer. Then they are going to fight and the War of the Color Line will outdo in phers; thus

savage inhumanity any war this world has yet seen. For colored folk have

much

remember and they will not forget. But is this inevitable? Must we sit helpless While we are planning, as a result of the present to

before this awful prospect? holocaust, the disarmament

of Europe and a European international world-police, must the rest of the

world be that

left

naked

to the inevitable horror of war, especially

directly in this outer circle of races,

it is

and not

when we know

in the inner

European

household, that the real causes of present European fighting are to be

found?

Our

duty

is

clear. Racial slander

Steadfast faith in

must

go. Racial prejudice will follow.

humanity must come. The domination of one people by

another without the other’s consent, be the subject people black or white,

The

doctrine of forcible economic expansion over subject peoples

must

stop.

must

go. Religious hypocrisy

must

stop. ‘Blood-thirsty’

Mwanga

of

Uganda

coming meant English domination. It did mean English domination, and the world and the bishop knew it, and yet the world was ‘horrified’! Such missionary hypocrisy must go. With clean hands and honest hearts we must front high Heaven and beg killed

an English bishop because he feared that

peace

in

his

our time.

work who can help us? In the Orient, the awakened Japanese and the awakening leaders of New China; in India and Egypt, the young men In this great

trained in tion

is

Europe and European

born

But

of.

in Africa?

ideals,

who now form

Who

better than the twenty-five million

the stuff that Revolu-

grandchildren of the European slave trade, spread through the Americas, and

now

writhing desperately for freedom and a place in the world?

millions

first

of

all

And

of these

the ten million black folk of the United States,

now

a

problem, then a world-salvation.

Twenty centuries before the Christ a great cloud sw^ept over sea and settled on Africa, darkening and well-nigh blotting out the culture of the land of Egypt, bbr half a thousand years Nefertari, ‘the

it

rested there until a black

most venerated figure

in

Egyptian

history,’ rose to

the throne of

redeemed the world and her people. Twenty centuries after black Africa, prostrate, raped, and shamed, lies at the feet of the

the Pharaohs and Christ,

woman. Queen

650

The African Roots

of the

War

conquering Philistines of Europe. Beyond the awful sea

a black

woman

is

weeping and waiting with her sons on her breast. What shall the end be? The world-old and fearful things, War and Wealth, Murder and Luxury? Or shall it be a new thing — a new peace and new democracy of all races: a great humanity of equal men? ‘Semper novi quid ex

651

Africa!'

The Negro’s Fatherland

one of the most important questions to be answered after this war. The very silence today concerning that future, on both sides of the forces at war, emphasizes its importance. We must remember that in

The

future of Africa

is

mine of undeveloped human labor but, also, that much of the raw material which the modern world particularly wants is to be found in Africa more abundantly that anywhere

Africa

else.

we have today not only the

Let us note the

rubber,

ivory,

diamonds,

list:

ostrich

— these

greatest world

Palm-oil, cocoa,

feathers,

mahogany, ebony, cork, cotton,

copper,

gold,

iron,

zinc,

tin,

lead

and

are the present gifts of Africa to the world. Others in

abundance hide in her bosom. The fight for the ownership of these materials and the domination of this labor was a prime cause of the present war. If this question is to be left unsettled after this war it is going to be a prime cause of future wars.

Why, 1

then, are

we

so silent concerning the fate of

50,000,000 and 200,000,000

indifference

is

human

largely psychological.

beings? It is

I

presume

the penalty of

something betw^een that the cause of our

human

degradation

which always exacts payment from oppressor and oppressed. Today possible to ignore the

Negro because of a

which the modern world does not tion

all.

is

history of degradation the parallel of

furnish. In ancient Mediterranean civiliza-

Negro blood was predominant

nearly

it

Negro genius and Negro

in

many

great nations

and present

in

civilization gave here their great gifts to

the world. In the Fniropean middle ages

when

Africa

became more

or less

separated from direct contact with FAirope, nevertheless, African culture

and legend and

filtered into ETirope,

continent.

and song came out of the dark

There was then no question of racial

But then, beginning

Sun^ey, 39

inferiority

late in the fifteenth century, the

years raped this continent

From

story

(November

on

world

a scale never before equalled.

10, 1917); 141.

652

based upon color. for four

The

hundred

result

was not

The Negro's Fatherland

only the degradation of Africa, guilty;

and we are

trade.

It

comes

still

was

it

a

moral degradation of those

shadow of the debauch of the African slave have great masses of unthought-of men; to

living in the

natural for us to

conceive of society as built upon an unsocial mudsill. labor organizations like the

upon

selves

who were

It is

American Federation of Labor

distinctly aristocratic lines, leaving

possible for great to organize

them-

out of account and out of

thought certain so-called lower elements of labor.

even possible

It is

an

for

organization like the League of Small and Subject Nationalities to bring in Africa only as an accident

and

Africa

its

and

problems builds

after-thought. This

mental attitude toward

upon unclear thinking based on

itself

the

tyranny of conventional words. \Vlien

we speak

of

modern African

sur\dval of ancient slavery.

absolute.

Modern

But

it

we think The cleft

of modern slavery as a

slavery

was not.

betw^een the h\^o was

African slavery was the beginning of the

problem, and must be looked

at

and interpreted from

modern

labor

that point of view unless

we would lose ourselves in an altogether false analogy. Modern world commerce, modern imperialism, the modern factory system and the modern labor problem began with the African slave trade. The first modern method of securing labor on a wide commercial scale and primarily for profit was

inaugurated in the middle of the fifteenth century and in the

between Africa and America. Through the 100,000,000

human

beings, with

social disorganization.

The

arisen.

America on which the

has been built and out of which

We

have

and economic and

became a great modern capitalistic

survivors of this wholesale rape

international laboring force in

movement

slave trade Africa lost at least

the attendant misery

all

commerce

modern

keep these black

tried ever since to

labor problems have

men and

their descen-

dants at the bottom of the scale on the theory that they were not thoroughly

men, that they cannot be self-respecting members of and contributors to modern culture — an assumption purely modern and undreamed of in ancient or medieval days. If,

now,

this

same psychology and

this

enslave these people passes over into the

same determination

new world

to exploit

after the war,

and

what can we

expect but, on the one hand, persistence of the idea that there must be an exploited class at the bottom of civilization and, on the other, an endeavor by

endless war and rapine, futile at

by which these millions of people

modern world can dream slavery even

we would

but in the end bound to be triumphant,

first

will gain their right to think

and

act.

No

of holding 200,000,000 of people in permanent

though they be black.

avoid this cost then

If

it

tries,

we must begin

the cost will be terrible.

If

the freeing of Africa through

this war.

There

is

an unusual opportunity

to

do

653

this.

Africa

is

today held by Negro

Africa, Pan-Africa,

and Imperialism

These Negro troops have saved France. They have conquered German Africa. They and their American Negro brothers are helping to save Belgium. It would be the least that Europe

troops trained

under European white

officers.

could do in return and some faint reparation

for the terrible

world history

beh\'een 1441 and 1861 to see that a great free central African state

out of

German

erected

is

East Africa and the Belgian Gongo. Surely after Belgium has

much from Germany as Africa has suffered from her, she ought to be willing to give up the Gongo to this end; and it would be right that England should refrain from taking German East Africas as well as refrain suffered almost as

from handing

it

back.

Out of this state we would make a

great

modern

effort to

restore the ancient efficiency of the land that gave the iron age to all the world,

and

that for ages led in agriculture, weaving, metal working,

the market place.

Here

is

fifteenth century. Liberia

were from

first

a

chance such

as the

only

modern

traffic

of

world has not seen since the

and Haiti were never given

to last harassed, as

and the

a sincere

chance and

capitalism can harass

little

and

hated nations.

The

new and

would be tremendous. Its first effect would be upon the millions in Africa and then upon their descendants throughout the world. In the West Indies and in South America are some 30,000,000 of men of Negro descent. They have given literature and effect of such a

freedom

to Brazil; they

and they have given

to

sincere start in Africa

have given industry and romance

North America

art

to the

and music and human

South America they may lose themselves

in the

West

Indies,

sensibility. In

blood of other people, but

in

the West Indies and North America they are striving for self-expression and

need only such encouragement spiritual effect

as just

treatment of their fatherland and

on the whole world would

give.

I

trust, therefore, that

new nations that are to start forth after this war new beginning of culture for the Negro race.

the

654

will

be

a

its

among

new Africa and

a

“What

Wliat

Africa to

is

me? Once

Me?”

Africa to

Is

should have answered the question simply:

I

should have said “fatherland” or perhaps better “motherland” because

born

when

century

in the

the walls of race were clear and straight;

I

was

I

when

the

world consisted of mutually exclusive races; and even though the edges might

be blurred, there was no question of exact definition and understanding of the meaning of the word. One of the first pamphlets that I wrote in 1897 was on

“The Conservation of Races” wherein proposed

“We

racial creed:

contribution to

make

I

set

down

as the first article of a

Negro people as a race have a and humanity which no other race can

believe that the

to civilization

make.” Since then the concept of race has so changed and presented so contradiction that as constitutes a tie

my fatherland. knew

which

can

I

Yet neither

meaning

its

face Africa

I

or cared

ask myself:

I

feel better

my father

nor

overmuch

for

yet their direct connection, in culture to .Africa

my

is

strong.

is

meaning

upon me

in

my it.

and

between us that

it

can explain? Africa father’s father ever

is,

of course,

saw Africa or

My mother’s folk were closer and

race,

became tenuous;

still,

my tie

thousand years or more. The mark of their

a

and

hair.

These

are obvious things, but of

little

more subtle do not know nor does

themselves; only important as they stand for real and

know

men. Whether they do

or not,

I

today.

But one thing

is

these ancestors of history;

back

in color

differences from other

science

I

is

of

On this vast continent were born and lived a large portion of

direct ancestors going

heritage

than

what

much

sure and that

mine and

have suffered a

actual ties of heritage

is

the fact that since the fifteenth century

their other

common

disaster

descendants have had a

and have one long memory. The

between the individuals of

ancestors that they have in

this

common and many

group, vary with the

others:

From Dusk of Dawn: An Essay Toward an Autobiography of a Race Concept

655

common

Europeans and

(1940).

Africa, Pan-Africa,

and Imperialism

Semites, perhaps Mongolians, certainly American Indians. But the physical

bond

is

least

and the badge of color

real

essence of

and

insult;

this

and

kinship

unimportant save

badge; the

binds together not simply the children of Africa,

hut extends through yellow Asia and into the South Seas.

me to Africa. When shall forget

as a

social heritage of slavery; the discrimination

is its

this heritage

relatively

It is

this unity that

draws

I

the night

first set

I

generation in descent from forefathers

and the waters of the Atlantic

full

foot

who

on African

left this

land.

soil?

I

am

the sixth

The moon was at the

lay like a lake. All the long slow afternoon as

the sun robed herself in her western scarlet with veils of mist\' cloud,

seen Africa

Cape Mount — that mighty headland

afar.

northern sentinel of the realm of Liberia

its

clear.

The

sea.

black. Africa faded away, the stars stood forth curiously twisted

— the

horizon.

Little

Then

Twdnkling

twin curves,

On beyond flowed the dark

low undulating land quaint with palm and breaking zenith

had

— gathered itself out of the cloud at

and then darkened and grew

half past three

with

I

w'orld

grew

— Orion in the

Bear asleep and the Southern Cross rising behind the

afar,

ahead, a lone light shone, straight

ships

at the

fore.

appeared below, around, and rising shadows. “Monrovia,”

lights

said the Captain.

Suddenly we swerved

and then

to

our

left.

shading in the shadows;

Then

the

shadow

it

— here,

It

ing boats.

on the

w^aters

Then we

a boat,”

as the

one

its

crowaiing

sensed a darker

said. “It’s

anchor roared

— great

w'ith

two boats!”

into the deep, five

ten-oared barges with

men

us.

— above, the shadow's, there the town, here the sweepforged ahead w'ith the flag — stripes and a lone star flaming

at

One

and

Monrovia,

there.

still. “It’s

and glided toward

into line

was nine

lay very

drifted in pieces

boats outlined themselves

swung

long arms of the bay enveloped us

to the right rose the twinkling hill of

Lights flashed on the shore

star.

The

night

behind, the ensign of the customs floating the white caps of ten black sailors.

Up

w ide; and bending to

the long oars,

the stairway clambered a soldier in

khaki, aide-de-camp of the President of the Republic, a

customhouse

official,

American legation — and after them sixty-five lithe, lean black stevedores with w'hom the steamer would work down to Portuguese Angola and back. A few moments of formalities, greetings and good-bys and I was in the clerk of the

the great long boat with the President’s aide

On

the other side, the

young

clerk

and

— a brown major in brown khaki.

at the back, the black

Before us on the high thwarts were the rowers: in

muscle and

strength to

One and

sinew', little larger

men,

barelegged

pilot.

boys, black, thin, trained

than the oars in thickness, they bent their

them and swung upon them.

in the

center gave curious

for the spurts

and the

little

cackling cries to keep up the rhythm,

stroke, a call a bit thicker

656

and

sturdier;

he gave

a low'

“What

guttural

command now and

moon, swept

the

I

was

Me?”

then; the boat, alive, quivering, danced beneath

a great curve to the bar to breast

“t’chick-a-tickity, t’chick-a-tick-ity,”

now between

Africa to

Is

now near the

boats,

narrow teeth of foam

its



sang the boys, and we glided and raced,

landing

— now cast aloft at the dock. And lo!

in Africa.

They are Krus and Fanti — men, women and ehildren, and all the night they march and sing. The music was once the music of mission revival hymns. But it is that music now transformed and the silly words hidden in an unknown tongue — liquid and sonorous. It is tricked out and expounded with cadence and turn. And this is Christmas Eve, and Africa

that

same rhythm I heard

in

first

singing in Monrovia.

is

Tennessee

forty years ago: the air

is

carried by men’s strong voices, while floating above in obbligato,

high mellow voices of women



raised

and

come

the

the ancient African art of part singing, so

it is

curiously and insistently different.

So they come, gay appareled, lit by transparency. They enter the gate and flow over the high steps and sing and sing and sing. They saunter round the house, pick flowers, drink water and sing and sing and sing. The warm dark heat of the night steams up to meet the moon.

On Christmas

Day, 1923,

we walk down

Monrovia, by houses old and gray and

wide

St.

And

the night

to the narrow,

is

song.

crooked wharves of

step-like streets of stone. Before

is

the

Paul River, double-mouthed, and beyond, the sea, white, curling on

the sand. Before us

is

the

isle

— the

tiny

isle,

cotton tree, where the pioneers lived in 1821.

round — then up the

river.

Great bowing

hut-covered and guarded by a

We board

the boat, then circle

trees, festoons

blossoms, star-faced palms and thatched huts;

tall

of flowers, golden

spreading trees

lifting

themselves like vast umbrellas, low shrubbery with gray and laced and knotted the broad, black, murmuring river. Here a tree holds wide fingers out roots



and

stretehes

them over

wide green fingers iron

homes

the water in vast incantation; bananas throw their

to the sun. Iron villages, scarred clearings with gray, sheet-

staring,

grim and bare,

at the

ancient tropical flood of green.

sweeps wide and the shrubs bow low. Behind, Monrovia rises in clear, calm beauty. Gone are the wharves, the low' and clustered houses of the port, the tight-throated business village, and up sweep the villas and the low'

The

river

brown and cream and white, with great mango and cotton trees, with lighthouse and spire, wdth porch and pillar and the color of shrubbery and

wall,

blossom.

climbed the upright shore to a senator’s home and received his wide — and kindly hospitality — curious blend of feudal lord and modern farmer — sandwiches, cake, and champagne. Again w^e glided up the drowsy river

We

five, ten,

with a

twenty miles and

compound

came

to

our hostess, a mansion of five generations

of endless native servants and cows under the palm

657

Africa, Pan-Africa,

The daughters

thatches.

and Imperialism

of the family wore, on the beautiful black skin of their

necks, the exquisite pale gold-chains of the Liberian artisan and the slim,

black

little

granddaughter of the house had a wide pink ribbon on the thick

curls of her dark hair, that lay like

porches, one above the other,

sudden sunlight on the shadows. Double

welcomed

Christmas and a dash of gin, sang and danced played in the blazing sun.

We sat at a

long broad table and ate duck, chicken,

zenith; the Little Bear beneath the horizon,

Milky

Way — all

and Madeira wine. Then we

heavens, the uptwisted sky

at the

awry, a-living

man, gay with Children ran and

native

in the road.

beef, rice, plantain, collards, cake, tea, water

went and looked

A

us to ease.

— sun

for

— Orion and Cassiopeia at

now

snow

at

unfamiliar sights in the

Christmas, and happiness

and cheer.

The

shores were lined with old sugar plantations, the buildings rotting and

What had happened, I asked? The owners and planters had deserted these homes and come down to Monrovia, but why? After all, Monrovia had not much to offer in the way of income and occupation. Was this African laziness and inefficiency? No, it was falling.

a

I

looked upon the desolation with a certain pain.

specimen of the way

shores of far-off Africa.

sugar and supply

which the waves of modern Here during our Civil War,

in

broke over the

industr}'

men

hastened to

New York. They built their own boats and filled the

raise

river

and

But afterwards, Louisiana came back into the Union, colored

sailed the sea.

Rillieux invented the

vacuum

pan; the sugar plantations began to spread in

Cuba and the Sugar Trust monopoly of refining machinery, together with the new beet sugar industry, drove Liberia quickly from the market. Wliat all this did not do, the freight rates finished. So sugar did not pay in Liberia

crops rose and

As in

I

in the

same way.

look back and recall the days, which

which

I

have called great — the occasions

have taken part and which have had

I

significance,

my

fell

I

and other

can remember none

like the first

for

me and

others the widest

of Januaiy', 1924.

Once

bachelor’s degree before a governor, a great college president,

bishop of

New

England. But that was rather personal

in

its

memory

any way epochal. Once before the assembled races of the world

I

it

was not greater than the day when

I

took

and

a

than in

was called

speak in London in place of the suddenly sick Sir Harry Johnston. great hour. But

I

It

was presented

to

was a to the

President of the Negro Republic of Liberia. l,iberia

had been

forced her. bolster

under the shock of world war into which the Allies She had asked and been promised a loan by the United States to resting

and replace her stricken

nary requirement and waited

money,

it

trade.

when

She had conformed

waiting was almost

was world prestige and protection

at a

time

to every prelimi-

fatal. It

when

was not simply

the

was sorely beset by creditors and greedy imperial powers. At the

658

little

last

republic

moment.

“What

Is

Me?”

Africa to

an insurgent Senate peremptorily and

finally refused the request

and strong

recommendation of President Wilson and his advisers, and the loan was refused. The Department of State made no statement to the world, and Liberia stood naked, not only well-nigh bankrupt, but peculiarly defenseless

amid scowling and unbelieving powers. It

was then that the United States made

and merely Coolidge, Boston,

a gesture,

at the

a gesture of courtesy; a little thing,

but one so unusual that

it

was epochal. President

suggestion of William H. Lewis, a leading colored lawyer of

named me, an American Negro

Minister Plenipotentiary to Liberia

Envoy Extraordinary and

traveler.

— the

highest rank ever given by any

country to a diplomatic agent in black Africa.

And

it

named

this

Envoy

the

special representative of the President of the United States to the President of

on the occasion of his inauguration; charging the Envoy with a personal word of encouragement and moral support. It was a significant action. It had in it nothing personal. Another appointee would have been equally significant. But Liberia recognized the meaning. She showered upon Liberia,

the

Envoy every mark of appreciation and

made

Liberian Erontier Eorce was

At ten a.m.

New Year’s morning,

thanks.

his special aide,

1924, a

The Commander

and

of the

a sergeant, his orderly.

company of the

Erontier Eorce, in red

and khaki, presented arms before the American Legation and escorted Solomon Porter Hood, the American Minister Resident, and myself as Envoy Extraordinary and my aide to the Presidential Mansion — a beautiful white,

fez

verandaed house, waving with palms and fronting a grassy

street.

some antiquated and yet this was done with such simplicity, grace and seriousness that none could escape its spell. The Secretary of State met us at the door, as the band played the impressive Liberian National hymn, and soldiers saluted: Ceremonials are old and

to

All hail! Liberia, hail!

In union strong, success

We

cannot

fail.

With God above.

Our

We

rights to prove.

will the

world

659

assail.

is

sure.

Africa for the Africans

The

Associated Press in a Paris dispatch, put into the

mouth

of the editor a

statement that colored Americans could not withstand the African climate, could not oust the Europeans, and did not desire to do so.

ought

It

ment.

to

go without saying that the editor never made any such

The American Negro

is

just as able to

American white men and no more a healthy is,

man who

therefore,

able.

The

withstand the African climate as climate

is

severe and trying, but

follows the rules of tropical hygiene can live there.

no necessary

state-

There

keep American Negroes out of

barrier of climate to

Africa.

On

the other hand,

it

would be

foolish for colored folk to

assume

that

because their great grandfathers were Africans that the climate of Africa would have no terrors for them. It has its terrors for all men and these terrors can be

overcome.

The

present opportunity for emigration to Africa

There

limited.

is

pioneers, good health,

some

and are willing

parts of French, Portuguese

language), and in

They

will

however, exceedingly

absolutely no chance for colored laborers.

education and some technical or agricultural

in

is,

some

rough

it

who have

West Africa,

in British

the courage of

can find a career

and Egyptian Africa

parts of British

be objects of suspicion

to

skill,

Men with capital,

if they

(if

in Liberia,

they speak the

are British subjects.

West Africa and

will suffer

some

caste restrictions.

On and

in

the other hand, in the Belgian

Congo,

in British East

and South Africa

Rhodesia, an American Negro would hardly be allowed to enter,

much

Black merchants and traders have chances in West Africa but they the mercy not only of the governments who are not eager to help them,

less settle.

Aare

at

but also of the great banks, corporations and syndicates

skim the cream of all From The

Crisis,

profits.

February 1922.

660

who

are in position to

Africa for the Africans

Again the editor

distinctly believes that Africa

the Africans and, as soon as

may be, by the Africans. He

that Africa should be administered by

They have no more

should be administered

West Indians

does not

or

for

mean by this

American Negroes,

right to administer Africa for the native Africans than

native Africans have to administer America.

661

A Second Journey

In 1919 Pan-Africa was a phrase of

war

— an

the world in travail to the plight of a raee.

attempt to

The

understood, for other and greater eries drowned to

eome

a

ehanee

to test the

Pan-Africa

to

eall the attention

of

ery was heard but hardly

it.

But

1921 there seemed

in

depths and meaning of Pan-Afriea eonseious-

ness.

Three

sets

of audienees gathered in London, Brussels and Paris for the

Seeond Pan-Afriean Congress. In the English gathering were Negroes and mulattoes from West and South Afriea, British Guiana, Grenada, Jamaiea, Nigeria and the Gold Coast; Indians from India and East Afriea; eolored men from London and twenty-five American Negroes. The voiees were outspoken after a rather timid and apologetie opening. The resolutions — strong and elear, with their plain leaning

toward industrial demoeraey

— went through

without a dissenting voiee, though some older representatives of white British philanthropy were evidently not eontent.

The

British attitude

showed

itself

best in a conferenee arranged by the

Aborigines Protection Society with Sir Sidney Olivier, former Governor of Jamaiea, in the chair. Their seeretary promptly put the burden of position on us by offering three resolutions for our adoption seription in Afriea. '‘to

Our eommittee

replied that a

on Land, Labor, and Con-

demand

for “suffieent lands”

provide for the eeonomie independenee of the family units” in Africa did

not go

far

enough; that we agreed with

did not agree that Erance had

no

their opposition to the

new slavery and

right to conseript her blaek as well as her

white eitizens, so long as eonseription was her poliey, and so long as she

recognized

raeial equality;

than any other

modern

and

that

PVanee did eome nearer

Then we

this

reeognition

ehanged the subjeet and spoke freely of the future relations of philanthropy and the Negro problem laying down the prineiple that Negro effort, aided by white eooperation, must be the land.

ride rather than white effort carried

From New

Republic, 29

(December

7, 1921):

in turn

on without referenee 39-42.

662

to the

opinion and

A

Second Journey

to

Pan-Africa

wishes of black folk or with only casual consultation of picked representatives. In contrast to this attitude was our conference with the foreign relations

committee of the Labor party. There we sought to let men like [John R.] Clynes, Sidney and Beatrice Webb, Lowes Dickinson, Mrs. Philip Snowden, Leonard Woolf, C. P. Buxton, Sir G. Fordham and others, know the real oneness of black and white labor problems. They were not perhaps entirely convinced, but they were deeply sympathetic and were plainly seeking

mation rather than hoping In

infor-

to give advice.

Belgium the scene changed.

white and local, but the Belgian

We

had here audiences predominantly

Congo was

strongly represented, the Ameri-

can group was increased and the French colonies and Abyssinia appeared. Not only was this a change of personnel but the language difficulty was to the fore, leaving the thirty

too, a

new spirit was

Americans

in the air.

for the

most part

We sensed the

linguistically stranded;

and

Fear about us in a war-land with

work with Mr. Frank, the Colonial Minister, and others, and probably some diplomatic interchanges, to keep us from being denied admission to Belgium, and particularly the use of the State building, the Palais Mondial. The opening session was palpitating with curinerves

osity

still

taut.

and the

It

had taken

press tables

swift

were crowded.

Two

Generals graced the platform

where presided the black Senegalese, Blaise Diagne, President of the Congress and French Deputy and High Commissioner of African troops. A white French deputy was also there, an Abyssinian, and an American colored

woman;

who

the Colonial Office was represented by two officials

declined platform

seats;

pointedly

there were also present a group of international

hundred white Belgians, and many black Congolese. For hvo days the speeches went on smoothly — too smoothly, I felt, because nothing was being said but platitudes — not a word about the past in the

students, several

Congo; not a word about the present; only a hint of a future with some education, some recognition of the chiefs, some industrial betterment. To this was added every effort to show what Belgium had done for the Negro. And here there was

wonder of

that

much to be said: we museum at Tervurien.

stood astounded before the crowning It

was marvelous

— the visible,

riotous

wealth of the Congo, the startling size of the vast African empire destined to make Belgium but a physical fraction of her own black colonial self; the

beauty

— the infinite,

and center Leopold It

was

at

intriguing, exquisite beauty of

art.

And

yet in the midst

the end of the long, straight, beech-lined avenue of ten miles, sat

II

in ivory;

while in the Congress he had not been mentioned.

in

no

of trouble-making but as a simple duty that

spirit

I

rose the last

afternoon and read in French and English the resolutions of London. I did not dream of the consternation which I would cause, but even if had, it \\'as my 1

evident and

bounden duty to read our adopted

663

charter of complaint and hope.

Africa, Pan-Africa,

even

in

Belguim.

came not and

I

had previously made

I

was unprepared

and “absolutely inadmissible”

who

Diagne, the Senegalese Frenchman after the resolutions

investor in

as

we

hear the word which London received without

to

protest, called “Bolshevist”

government,

plain in correspondence that

it

but certainly for calm and reasonable complaint,

for “revolution”

excitement

and Imperialism

were read;

in Brussels.

presided, was beside himself with

as

an under-secretary of the French

ranking Negro of greater France, and perhaps as a successful

French colonial

position. Possibly

enterprises,

he was undoubtedly

he was bound by actual promises

French was almost too

France and Belgium. His

my ears, but his meaning was clear:

swift for

man

to

in a difficult

he

felt that

Belgium and France had been compromised by black American radicals; he especially denounced our demand for “the restorathe cause of the black

tion of the ancient

in

common

ownership of the land

in Africa” as

nism. Panda, the young French black leader of Negro

Congo

in

rank

commu-

Belgium, was

— his foster mother, a Belgian general, several members of philanthropic bodies — eddied curiously perplexed and

my heart went out to

him. White friends

about him and about Diagne with advice and warning, while several Belgian officials

made speeches and

reporters

hunted

for copy.

Meantime, the colored Americans were pressing rather peremptorily for the appointment of a committee on the question of our London resolutions — forgetting the almost unlimited

alarmed and cheered. At

and the world.

We

power of a French presiding officer.

least the question

would not leave

a

Congress ended

in

laid before

was both

Belgium

Negro World Congress without

mentioning the truth of our problems. that our

had been

I

an uproar

On

the other hand,

— or

if

if it

really

could be said

our French and Belgian col-

leagues could be induced to withdraw, the Pan-African

movement would

receive a severe, perhaps fatal, check. Paul Otlet, a white Belgian, “father of

the League of Nations” and co-secretary with Senator La Fontaine of the Palais

Mondial, sought

Diagne rushed

calm the waters by

to

a harmless proposal

even allowing guests and

to a vote,

swamping Pan-Africa momentarily under Otlet’s proposition declared

which

visitors a voice,

and

the opinion of white Belgians. Mr.

Negroes “susceptible” of advancement from

their

present backward condition and that their development would rid humanity of a weight of 200 millions of ignorant incompetents, and that collaboration

between races on a

basis of equality

therefore, a federation of

all

was an urgent duty today.

uplift agencies of

He

proposed,

Negroes and their friends

centering in the Palais Mondial, Belgium.

Diagne’s precipitate acceptance of this program pleased neither

its

pro-

moters, like the aged General Sorelas, former pupil of the great Cardinal

Lavigenie

— nor yet the American

movement and w ho

saw' little to

Negroes who envisaged

encourage them

664

to

hope

a bigger, stronger

that

Belgium was

A

Second Journey

to

Pan-Africa

ready to lead in the restoration of Negro civilization. Their strong but calm stand finally brought order out of threatened chaos: the Otlet resolutions were

declared adopted, but the tion, to

be debated on and

London manifesto was held finally voted

on

in Paris. After

for further considera-

adjournment, groups

of whites and blacks stood about until dark, discussing in kTench, Flemish,

Spanish, Portuguese and English, the meaning of that whirl of deep feeling

which

flared before

We came

adjournment.

to Paris

with a sense of strain and apprehension, only partially

allayed by a long, frank conference with

Diagne who acknowledged

that his

were high-handed but contended that he had only sought to prevent the “assassination of a race!” The Paris meeting was different from both London and Brussels. It was not “official” — it had clear and determined

methods

in Brussels

elements of

revolt.

It

was outspoken and

variety of groups represented

it

was

was larger than

bitter

in

included besides the United States, the former

with complaint.

London

German

or Brussels,

The and

colonies, the Por-

tuguese colonies, French Senegal, Congo, and the West Indies, British West

and Annam. There was no attempt to control the Congress in the interests of any one point of view. None of the colored deputies of the French Parliament attempted to have their way exclusively. India, the Philippines

Every attempt at smooth platitude was thwarted. “We are a little France,” cried the Haitian Minister diplomatically. “Yes, France did not give freedom to Haiti

— Haiti

young

Haiti;

answered the Americans amid the wild applause of and they added that when America seized Haiti, it was not

took

it,”

France but black America which made the only effective protest. “We are getting on all right in the French Congo,” cried a black Congolese in halting phrase

but he was followed by a white Frenchman, Challaye, with

circumstantial denunciation of P rench methods in her Congo.

French and English officials, two ex-governors from Africa, and many prominent whites watched the proceedings and reporters questioned us; above all, one thought was uppermost: What did this Congress mean? What was back of it? What were our objects? Especially we were asked repeatedly if we represented the West Indian “Africa for the Africans” movement, which apparently proposed the forcible expulsion of the whites. It was not easy to explain at

first

that this

Congress was

a

meeting

tanceship, for organization and study; that

complete, and adopted policy, but that repudiated any policy of war, conquest, or

it

for

conference and acquain-

did not as yet represent any

members almost unanimously race hatred. On the other hand, we its

did agree on an unalterable belief in racial equality and on the general

proposition that the government and policy of Africa must be designed primarily for the good of the Africans themselves and not primarily for the profit of colonial powers.

665

Africa, Pan-Africa,

Here

and Imperialism

was that we encountered the central Fear of France; the main

it

Europe which

reaction of that organized thrift of Central

and leading economic reorganization

after the war.

France recognizes Negro

equality not only in theory but in practice; she has for the

most part enfran-

chised her civilized Negro citizens. But what she recognizes of her citizens, black and white, to exploit by

today governing

is

modern

the equal right

is

industrial

methods her

laboring classes, black and white; and the crying danger to black France

educated and voting leaders

its

rather than lead

men

its

will join in the industrial

masses to education and culture. This

is

that

robbery of Africa is

not yet true, but

Diagne and Candace, while unwavering defenders of racial opporeducation for blacks and the franchise for the civilized, are curiously

like

tunity,

timid

when

the industrial problems of Africa are approached.

For instance, they asked us to omit from the French version of our English manifesto, seven paragraphs which emphasized and particularized our ar-

raignment of predatory capital

in Africa.

The

gist

of the paragraphs lay in

these words:

If

we

are

coming

maladjustment

to

modern problem is to correct of wealth, it must be remembered that

recognize that the great

in the distribution

the basic maladjustment

is

in the outrageously unjust distribution of world

income between the dominant and suppressed peoples; in the rape of land and raw material; the monopoly of technique and culture. And in this crime white labor

and consciously,

is

particeps criminis with white capital. Unconsciously

carelessly

and

deliberately, the vast

power of the white

modern democracies, has been cajoled and flattered into imperialistic schemes to enslave and debauch black, brown and yellow labor, until with fatal retribution, they are themselves today bound and gagged and rendered impotent by the resulting monopoly of the world’s raw labor vote in

material in the hands of a dominant, cruel

The Americans

and irresponsible

few.

upon including these paragraphs, but consented to marked as being the opinion of black America but

insisted

have them especially

reserved by black France for consideration at the next Congress.

Back of this serious internal difference of opinion and policy, which future Congresses must thresh out, lay a subtler and more fundamental problem:

Europe asked. What do these hundred, more or Negroid ancestry

less,

persons of near and

far

Pan-Negro movement or the work of individuals or of small groups enthusiastic with an idea but representing

really represent?

Is this

a real

little?

And we

ourselves could not answer.

Of the hundred and

fifty

millions of

African Negroes, few were conscious of our meetings. But a few were: in

666

A South Africa — even

Second Journey

in far

Egyptian Sudan, in Angola,

Gold Coast,

the

Swaziland

— and

in Liberia

and

black

men knew

tended.

far did

we

— in

the

in Nigeria

and

Kenya, East Africa

British

West Africa,

definitely of our

really represent

meeting and some

and voice them and how

dreams and ambitions? were undoubtedly an intelligentsia — a small group of

we merely

We

some

extent, but

opinion of our group.

Was our

guidance be followed? is

Who

were

more

intellectuals

certainly seeking to guide the public

interpretation honest shall say until

Time

and

clear,

and would our

itself tells?

But certainly

today no gainsaying the ground swell in the Negro race

unresting, mighty surge;

every colonial power, world.

far

at-

floating in the air of our

interpreting to

there

in

Erench and Belgian Congo and throughout the

in the

Americas,

many But how

to Pan-Africa

What

is

it is

reported by every colored

it is

official,

— the great,

it is

feared by

sensed by every intelligent Negro in every part of the

Sometimes it is revolt against slavery; sometimes revolt sometimes complaint against low wages, always a chafing at

it?

against land theft;

the color-bar.

What

part did the Pan-African Congress play in this worldwide feeling?

did not cause

do three

1

.

It

it,

as

many accuse;

it

but partially and

brought face

the It

voiced

it.

But

it

did

things:

to face

and

in personal contact a

Negroes of the calibre that might lead black

2.

fitfully

modern

group of educated

men to emancipation

in

world.

discovered

among

these

men more

points of agreement than of

difference. 3.

It

expressed the need of further meetings and strengthened the

permanent organization.

667

It

Little Portraits of Africa

THE PLACE, THE PEOPLE Africa It is

to

is

vegetation.

sunshine

It is

the riotous, unbridled bursting

— pitiless shine

hot night shadows.

Animal

life

should note

is it

it

And then

— the

of leaf and limb.

of blue rising from morning mists and sinking the stars

— very near are

near and bright and euriously arrayed. blinding strength of

life

The

tree

is

Africa.

wide deep shade, the burly

there wild and abundant

more but here

the herb

— perhaps

is

beautiful shrubbery, sueh splendor of leaf

the stars to Africa,

The

strong,

lavish height of

in the inner jungle

triumphant, savagely sure

it.

I

— such

and gorgeousness of flower

I

have

never seen.

And

the people! Last night

masque. There were young

I

went

to

Kru-town and saw a Christmas

women and men

chestnuts, clothed in white robes

with sineerity, naivete and verve.

of the color of warm ripe horse

and turbaned. They played the Christ story Conceive “Silent Night” sung in Kru by this

dark white procession with flaming candles; the

little

black mother of Christ

erossing with her baby, in figured blue, with Joseph in

multi-eolored cloak and beside

Mandingan

fez

and

them on her worshipping knees the white

wreathed figure of a solemn dark angel. The shepherds watched their floeks by night, the angels sang; and Simeon, raising the baby high in his black arms, sang with my heart in English Kru-wise, “Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seen thy salvationr Liberia

is

gay

in

costume — the

thrifty

Krus

who

burst into color of a

holiday; the proud Veys always well-gowned; the Liberian himself often in

white. 1 he children sometimes in their From The

Crisis, April 1924.

668

own

beautiful skins.

Little Portraits

of Africa

SUNDAY, JANUARY I

have walked three hours

arose draped, with here

1924

13,

in the Afriean bush. In the high

and there the

flash of flower

and

bush mighty

trees

of bird.

The

eall

monkey sentinel cried and his fellows dashed down the great tree avenues. The way was marked — yonder the leopard that called last night under the moon, a bush cow’s hoof; a dainty tread of antelope. We leaped the trail of driver ants and poked at the great houses of the white ants. The path rose and wound and fell now soft in green glow, now golden, now shimmery through the water as

we balanced on

of timid unseen

life,

a bare log.

glide of dark snake.

cocoa, plantain, cassava. Nothing its

harmonious colorings — its

I

more

beautiful than an African village

its

its



dainty houses with the kitchen

careful delicate decorations

believe that the African form in color and curve

— though

is

and then the

the beautifulest

comely with perfect and shining eyes, — but the form of the slim limbs, the muscled torso,

thing on earth; the face teeth

is

Then came the native farms — coffee,

cleanliness,

palaver place of entertainment,

people.

There was whine of monkey, scramble

is

not so lovely

often

the deep full breasts!

The bush

is

silence. Silence of things to be, silence vocal with infinite

minor music and

flutter

and tremble — but

silence,

deep silence of the great

void of Africa.

some rose and flared like green fine work; some flared before they rose; some soared and drooped; some were stars and some were sentinels; then came the ferns — the feathery delicate things of grottos and haunts with us, leapt and sang in the sun — they thrust their virgin tracery up

And

the palms;

to trees. Bizarre

and out and almost us as though

some

artist all

shapes of grass and shrub and leaf greeted

Divine was playing and laughing and trying every

bewitched pencil above the mighty buildings of the ants. riding on the singing heads of black boys swinging in a hammock. The

trick of his I

am

smooth black bodies swing and sing, the neck lovely voices and sweet young souls of Africa!

669

set square, the hips sway.

O

The Pan-African Congresses The Story of a Growing Movement

The

first

Pan-African Congress was held February 19-21, 1919, in the

Hotel, Paris.

The

dent; Dr. W.E.B.

Grand

M. Blaise Diagne, PresiGibbs Hunt and Mr. M.E.F.

executive committee consisted of

Du

Bois, Secretary; Mrs. Ida

Fredericks. Fifty-seven delegates representing fifteen countries were present

and among the speakers were members of the PTench Parliament, the

Presi-

dent of Liberia, a former Secretary of State of Portugal and several other distinguished persons.

The second

met in London August 28 and 29, 1921, and September 1 and 2, 1921, and in Paris,

Pan-African Congress

Belgium, August 31, France, September 4 and 5, 1921, with M. Blaise Diagne in Brussels,

W.E.B.

Du

Bois as Executive Secretary.

A

special

as President

committee

and

visited the

Assembly of the League of Nations with a petition, September 6. There were present one hundred and ten delegates representing thirty-three different countries and the sessions were attended by about a thousand visitors. Among the speakers were Florence Kelley of America,

Norman

Leys of England,

Senator LaEontaine and Professor Otlet of Belgium, Blaise Diagne and

M.

Barthelemy of the Erench Ghamber of Deputies, General Sorelas of Spain, M. Paul Panda of the Belgian Gongo and others. The European press of England, Scotland, Erance, Belgium, Germany and Italy took wide notice of the Gongress.

The

third Pan-African Congress

and November 25, 1923

was held November 7 and

8,

1923 in I.ondon

There was a small number of delegates to these sessions as the Gongress had not been properly worked up by the French secretary. 41ie Gircle of Peace and Foreign Relations under Mrs. A. W. f

rom The

Crisis,

October

1

in Lisbon.

927.

670

The Pan-African Congresses

Hunton as Chairman finally sent Dr. Dn Bois to hold the Congress. There were some distinguished people as speakers including Sir Sidney, now Ix)rd Olivier, Mr. H. G. Wells and Mr. Harold Laski; and Mr. Ramsey McDonald would have been present had it not been for the sudden crisis of the general election. In Lisbon there were present the Minister of Colonies and one former minister and several members of parliament. It was planned to have the fourth Pan-African Congress meet

in the

West

1925 but the plans miscarried on account of the difficulty of transport. Finally, the Circle of Peace and Foreign Relations, under the Chairmanship of Mrs. A. W. Hunton, came forward and undertook to Indies in

assemble the Fourth Congress in 1927.

The

New York

Circle raised nearly Three

Congress and made

City,

August 21, 22, 23, and 24,

Thousand

Dollars to finance the

the arrangements. Dr. W.E.B.

all

Du

Bois acted as

General Chairman and Mr. Rayford W. Logan as Secretary and interpreter. An exhibition of fifty-two maps and charts illustrating the condition of peoples of African descent was arranged by Dr. Du Bois and was on exhibition at headquarters.

The program included an opening meeting with

history of the Pan-African

Congresses and greetings by delegates from West Africa, several of the West Indian Islands, including Haiti, and the East Indies. To this Mr. William Pickens added a report of the Brussels Conference for Oppressed Races. On the following three days, sessions were held morning, afternoon and night,

up African missions, the history of Africa, the history and present conditions of the West Indies, the economic development of Africa and the

taking

political partition of Africa.

Africa

and African

Among the

art

and

The

closing meeting dealt with education

literature.

chief speakers during the sessions were

former Minister of Haiti

m

to

Erance, former

Member

M. Dantes

Bellegarde,

of the Assembly of the

League of Nations and Commander of the Erench Legion of Honor; Dr. of Charles H. Wesley, of Howard University; Professor Melville Herskovits Columbia; Professor L. W. Hansberry of Howard; Chief Amoah III of the H. Phillips of British Gold Coast; Mr. Leslie Pinkney Hill and Mr. H.

Cheyney; Dr. Wilhelm Menschmg of Germany; and Mr. John Vandercook. often crowded. All the sessions were well attended and the evening sessions The total attendance aggregated five thousand persons. There were 208 paid Haiti, the delegates, representing 22 states and the District of Columbia; Virgin Islands, the

Bahamas and Barbadoes; South America;

Sierra Leone, Nigeria

and Liberia, West

Africa;

the

Germany and

Gold Coast, India.

The

following resolutions were adopted:

The Fourth

Pan-African Congress, assembled in

671

New

York CiR, August

Africa, Pan-Africa,

21, 22, 23 states,

and

24, 1927, with representatives

from nearly

Liberia,

and

and Imperialism

British

all

from twenty-three American

of the West Indian Islands, from South America,

West Africa adopts

this

statement to express the legitimate

aims and needs of the peoples of Negro descent.

GENERAL

IN Negroes everywhere need:

1.

A voice

2.

Native rights to the land and

3.

Modern education for all children. The development of Africa for the Africans and

4.

profit of 5.

The

in their

own government. its

natural resources.

not merely for the

Europeans.

re-organization of

commerce and

main object of capital and

industry so as to

labor the welfare of the

make

the

many rather than

the enriching of the few. 6.

The

treatment of civilized

men

as civilized despite differences of

birth, race or color.

Specifically

and

in particular

we

stress

the need of reform in the following

countries:

HAITI In accordance with the report of the

cans

we demand:

Committee of

the withdrawal from Haiti of

United States and

all

officers,

military,

Six disinterested Ameri-

all

military forces of the

naval or otherwise, except only

regularly accredited diplomatic representatives or consular agents. demand that actual self-government be restored. In 1928 Haitian elections

We

should be held.

We demand

American Receiver General of Customs be replaced by equitable agreement with the bond holders and that in general the attempt of American capital to dominate the industry and monopolize the land of Haiti be decisively checked and turned into such channels

as

will

that the

encourage industry and agriculture

Haitian people. ...

672

for the

benefit of

The Pan-African Congresses

BRITISH AFRICA congratulate Great Britain on granting increased political power to the

We

four colonies of British West Africa.

Africans

may

control their

own

We urge an extension of this policy so that

legislative councils.

We

urge restoration of their land and the granting of a voice in the government to the natives of Kenya and of Northern and Southern Rhodesia.

.

.

.

FRENCH AFRICA We urge in

French Africa

native education natives.

industry

We

a further

development of their admirable scheme of

and an extension of

number

political rights for a larger

of

ask protection for the natives against the exploitation by French

and commerce of the resources of this great colony.

THE BELCIAN CONCO movement on the part of Belgium to restore land ownership to the natives; to give them some voice the Belgium in their own government and to restrain the effort to make Congo merely a profitable investment for European industry.

We still

await in the Belgium

Congo

real

evidence of a

.

.

.

ABYSSINIA We demand the continued tional

movements on

independence of Abyssinia, coupled with interna-

the part of philanthropists to bring

modern industry planned Abyssinians and not simply for the European trade. the people of that land and

modern education

to

for the benefit of the

LIBERIA .

.

.

believe that the solution of Liberia’s problems lies in the establishnativ e of a strong system of universal education for all Liberians of both

We

ment and American

descent.

673

Africa, Pan-Africa,

and Imperialism

PORTUGAL We demand and

and her African colonies a curbing of that financial power which is forcing her into bankruptcy and making her

for Portugal

industrial

colonies the property of slave-driving concessionaires, despite the liberal and far-sighted colonial legislation of Portugal.

MISSIONS We believe

in missionary effort but in missionary effort for health,

morals and

education and not for military aggression and sectarian superstitions.

THE WEST INDIES We urge the peoples

of the West Indies to begin an earnest

movement

for the

federation of these islands; the reduction of their present outrageous expenses of government; the broadening of educational facilities on modern lines and

labor legislation to protect the workers against industrial exploitation. We regard the first step towards this to be an utter erasing of that color line

between mulattoes and blacks, which sprang from slavery and is still being drawn and encouraged by those who are the enemies of Negro freedom.

UNITED STATES We

believe that the Negroes of the United States should begin the effective use of their political power and instead of working for a few’ minor offices or for

merely local favors and concessions, they should vote with their eyes fixed upon the international problems of the color line and the national problems

which

effect the

candidates

who

Negro race

in the

United

States.

Only independent

votes for

out their desires regardless of party will bring them political and economic freedom. will carry

he economic situation of American Negroes is still precarious. We believe that along with their entry into industry as skilled and semi-skilled I

workers and their growing ownership of land and homes they should especially organize as consumers and from co-operative effort seek to bring to bear upon investors and producers the coercive power which co-operative con-

sumption has already attained in certain parts of Europe and of America. Lynching, segregation and mob violence still oppress and crush black Amer-

674

The Pan-African Congresses

but education and organized social and political power begin to point the

ica

way

out.

OTHER PEOPLES Upon

own problems, we must also express our narrow confines of the modern world entw ine

matters that he outside our

thought and wish because the

We

freedom and

real

We demand

the

cessation of the interference of the United States in the affairs of Central

and

our

interests with those of other peoples.

national independence in Egypt, in

desire to see

China and

in India.

South America.

We

thank the Soviet Covernment of Russia

the colored races and for the help

which

it

for

its

toward

liberal attitude

has extended to

them from time

to

time.

We urge the white workers of the world to realize that no program uplift

can be successfully carried through

colored labor

is

exploited

A committee to call a

in

Europe or America

and enslaved and deprived of

Eifth Pan-African

Congress and

of labor

so long as

all political

to present to

it

power.

a plan of

permanent organization was appointed. It consisted of Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois, chairman, Mrs. A.W. Hunton, M. Dantes Bellegarde, Mr. H.H. Phillips, Mr. Rayford W. Logan, Mr. E. Eugene Corbie, Mr. Otto E. Huiswoud, Mrs. B. Cannady and Bishop R.C. Ransom. This committee has power to enlarge

its

number.

I

675

The Disfranchised Colonies Colonies and the colonial system make the colonial peoples in a sense the

slums of the world, disfranchised and held in

poverty and disease.

Colonies are the slums of the world. They are today the places of greatest concentration of poverty, disease, and ignorance of what the

come

to

human mind

know. They are centers of helplessness, of discouragement of

has

initia-

of forced labor, and of legal suppression of all activities or thoughts which

tive,

the master country fears or dislikes.

They resemble

in

some ways

the municipal slums of the nineteenth

century in culture lands. In those days

men

thought of slums

being caused in a sense by the wretched people yielding to

no remedial action

in

any conceivable time.

of humanity would re-create them.

Then we were

the realization that slums were investments tion,

and

spiritual

who

as inevitable, as

inhabited them, as

If abolished,

the dregs

jerked back to our senses by

where housing,

freedom were lacking, and where

sanitation, educa-

for this reason the profits

of the landlords, the merchants, and the exploiters were enormous.

To most people

this characterization

of colonies will

seem overdrawn, and

of course in one major respect colonies differ radically from slums. Municipal

slums are mainly festering sores drawing their substance from the surrounding city

and sharing the blood and the culture of that

hand, are

who

for the

most part quite separate

control them. Their culture

in race

This sense of separation, therefore,

entity

Colonies, on the other

and culture from the peoples

often ancient

is

valuable, spoiled too often by misfortune ing.

city.

and

historically fine

and

and conquest and misunderstandmakes colonies usually an integral

beyond the sympathy and the comprehension of the ruling world. But

From Color and Democracy: Colonies and Peace

(1945).

676

The Disfranchised Colonies

in

both

city

and colony, labor

is

forced by poverty, and crime

Wliat, then, are colonies? Leaving analogies, in this case

look to

facts,

precisely.

and find them

There

also elusive.

It

is

largely disease.

is

none too good, we

difficult to define a

colony

are the dry bones of statistics; but the essential facts are

neither well measured nor logically articulated. After

all,

an imperial power

is

not interested primarily in censuses, health surveys, or historical research.

Consequently we know only approximately, and with wide margins of error, the colonial population, the number of the sick and the dead, and just what

happened before the colony was conquered. For the most part, today the colonial peoples not true of colonies in other days, but this

coolies,

and doctrines of race

modern

of the

of

fatal

civilization

This rationalization it

color

does not is

inferiority,

it

Negro

slavery,

satisfy

is

most

to

Chinese

proves to most white folk the logic

colonial system: Colonies are filled with peoples

were abreast with but

mainly true today. And

significance; coupled with

minds,

is

it is

are colored of skin; this was

and never can

who

never

be.

very satisfactory to empire-builders and investors,

science today, no matter

a matter of climate,

how much

it

did yesterday. Skin

and colonies today are mainly

in the hot, moist

and semitropics. Naturally, here skins are colored. But historically these lands also were seats of ancient cultures among normal men. Here human civilization began, in Africa, Asia, and Central America. What has happened to these folk across the ages? They have been conquered, enslaved,

tropics

oppressed, and exploited by stronger invaders. But was this invading force invariably stronger in body, keener in mind,

and higher

in culture?

necessarily, but always stronger in offensive technique, even

Not

though often

lower in culture and only average in mind. Offensive technique drew the conquerors

because the conquered had the processing goods for

human

fertile lands,

needs.

and thought on these aspects of

down upon

the conquered,

the needed materials, the arts of

With the conquerors eoncentrating time

culture, usually the

conquered could not

oppose the barbarians with muscle, clubs, spears, gunpowder, and capital. In time, the invaders actually surpassed, and far surpassed, the weaker peoples in wealth, technique, and variety of culture patterns, and

made them

slaves to

industry and servants to white men’s ease.

But what of the future? Have the present masters of the world such an eternal lien on civilization as to ensure unending control? By no means; their absorption in war and wealth has so weakened their moral fiber that the end of their rule is in sight. Also, the day of the colonial conquered peoples

very’

dawns, obscurely but surely. Today, then, the colonial areas

lie inert

or sullenly resentful or seething

with hate and unrest. With unlimited possibilities, they have but scraps of

677

Pan-Africa,

/Xfrica,

and Imperialism

understanding of modern accumulations of knowledge; but they are pressing toward education with bitter determination. The conquerors, on the other

hand, are giving them only the passing attention which preoccupation with problems of wealth and power at home leaves for colonial “problems.”

What, then, do modern colonies look

like, feel like? It

is

difficult to

draw

any universal picture. Superficial impressions are common: black boys diving for pennies; human horses hitched to rickshaws; menial service in plethora for a

rule over slaves, even to

wage near nothing; absolute

and death; fawning,

life

crawling obeisance; high salaries, palaces, and luxury coupled with abject, nauseating, diseased poverty

— this

in a vague, imperfect

way

paints the pre-

sent colonial world.

would appear to fill in this outline and make it precise and scientific. Empires do not want nosy busybodies snooping into their territories and business. Visitors to colonies are, to be sure, allowed and not nearly so easy as

It is

it

even encouraged; but their tours are arranged,

and

guide them in space

and they see usually what the colonial power wants them to more. Dangerous “radicals” are rigorously excluded. My own

in thought,

and

see

officials

visits to

little

colonies have been rare and unsatisfactory. Several times

South

in vain to visit

No

Africa.

and French West Africa and In Sierra

Leone

customs without

difficulty, as

at

Freetown

in 1923.

my papers were

became suspicious. With scant peremptorily down to headquarters, to a room handed

my

in

tried

have been in British

passport,

was passed through the

showing that

Plenipotentiary to Liberia, stopping simply to

1

Then

courtesy,

I

some reason

for

was

summoned

common

off the

pictures of escaped criminals decorating the walls. I

I

in order.

the authorities

Leone?

I

have

in Jamaica.

landed

I

were obtainable.

visas

I

What

did

I

want

jail,

with

in Sierra

was United States Minister

visit

on

my way home. The

commissioner unbent and dismissed me. That afternoon 1 was invited to a tea party at the governor’s mansion! What would have happened to me if I had not had a diplomatic passport, or

I

had been merely

same year

I

visited

Senegal and Conakry.

courtesy, but into the ruling caste;

colonial people.

me did

at 1

a colored

man

seeking

colony?

to study a British

d he

if

1

1

was received with great

had no contact with the mass of the

1

lodged with the American consul; the French consul had

dinner and the English consul

at tea in his palatial

see or learn of the millions of Negroes

who formed

mansion. But

little

the overwhelming

mass of the colonial population. In 1915,

1

visited Jamaica.

1

landed

at

Kingston and then, being tired and

on vacation, did the unconventional thing of walking across the' island

Mantego was

Bay.

1

immediately became an object of suspicion.

in a sense, albeit

It

was wartime.

unconsciously, intruding into Jamaica’s backyard.

678

to

1

1

had

The Disfranchised Colonies

proper

visas,

warned by

but

I

was not following the beaten path of the

a furtive black

man

were on

that the police

tourist.

my

1

track.

was soon

My

only

recourse was to look np a long-time friend, principal of the local school. ostentatiously drove

me downtown, seated with him

prancing horses. Thus was is

that in

all

1

He

high in his surrey behind

properly introduced and vouched

for.

The

point

these cases one saw the possibility of arbitrary power without

appeal and of a race and class situation

unknown

in free countries.

In the main, colonial peoples are living abnormally, save those of the

untouched or

inert

mass of

Where

natives.

the whites form a small ruling

group, they are most abnormal and are not, as

home

group.

They

assumed-, replicas of the

is

consist chiefly of representatives of

commercial concerns

make money for themselves and the corporations they represent. They are in the main hard-boiled, often ruthless businessmen, unrestrained by the inhibitions of home in either law or custom. Next come the colonial officials, either identical with the commercial men or more or

whose

less

first

under

object

their

is

to

home

domination, especially through

and businessmen

clash, but business usually wins.

influence. Colonials

Sometimes philanthropic

career officials get the upper hand; but they are in danger of being replaced or losing promotion.

children

— are

The

official class

— heads,

and

apt to be arrogant, raised above their natural position and

feeling their brief authority; they lord swift

assistants, clerks, wives,

and exemplary punishment

for

it

demand The courts

over despised natives and

any affront

to their dignity.

presided over by whites are usually even-handed in native quarrels, but

through fear are whites.

White

strict,

prestige

harsh,

and even cruel

must be maintained

in cases

any

at

between natives and

cost.

There

is

usually a

considerable group of white derelicts, hangers-on, sadistic representatives of the '‘superior race,” banished to colonies by relatives

who are ashamed

to

keep

home. This whole group of whites forms a caste apart, lives in segregated, salubrious, and protected areas, seldom speaks the vernacular or knows the masses except officially. Their regular income from colonial services is liberal

them

at

according to

home

standards and often fantastic according to the standard of

Conceive of an income of $10,000 a year for a colonial governor over people whose average income is $25 a year! The officials get frequent vacations .with pay, and are pensioned after comparatively short service. The pensions are paid for life by colonial taxation, and the pensioners living in colonies.

are regarded as experts

Where

on colonial matters the

the white resident contingent

and Kenya, the

is

rest

of their

relatively large, as in

caste conditions are aggravated

need

679

South Africa

and the whites become the

colony while the natives are ignored and neglected except largely without rights that the colonists

lives.

respect.

as low-paid labor

Africa, Pan-Africa,

and Imperialism

Below this group of white overlords are the millions of natives. Their normal and traditional life has been more or less disrupted and changed in work, property, family life, recreation, health habits, food, religion, and other cultural matters. Their initiative, education,

freedom of action, have been

been almost

interfered with to a greater or less extent. Authority has

withdrawn from

and the white man’s word

their control

Their native standards of

life

is

entirely

law in most cases.

have been destroyed and the new standards

cannot be met by a poverty that

is

The mass

the worst in the world.

of natives

making their contact with and incurring repeated punishment for laziness and

sink into careless, inert, or sullen indifference,

whites as rare as possible,

infraction of arbitrary or inexplicable rules.

Up

from these

flattery

rise

two groups: the toadies or “white

and talebearing

and the

to curry favor;

folks niggers,”

resentful, bitter,

who

use

and ambitious

who seek by opposition or education to achieve the emancipation of their land and people. The educated and the half-educated, in particular, are the object of attack and dislike by the whites and are endlessly slandered in

given visitors and

The

all

testimony

scientists.

missionaries form another class.

They have been

unworldly visionaries, former pastors out of a

of all sorts of persons:

workers with and

job, social

without social science, theologians, crackpots, and humanitarians. Their vocation set

is

so unconventional that

it is

almost without standards of training or

norms of effort. Yet missionaries have spent

influenced hundreds of millions of

heaven

men

tens of millions of dollars

and

literally

vary from

to hell. Missionaries represent the oldest invasion of whites,

and incur

at first the

with results that

enmity of business and the friendship of natives. Colonial

officials,

on pressure from home, compromise differences, and the keener natives thereupon come to suspect missionar)^ motives and the native toadies rush to get converted

according

and cash

on

in

The

benefits.

to the pressure of these

total result varies trerriendously

elements.

Despite a vast literature on colonial peoples, there scientific basis for

who

set

out to

comprehensive

make

study.

a case for the imperial

missionaries, of all degrees of reliability

by every conceivable motive and

and

reliability.

systems in Africa and Asia,

meets

fact. In

it

few cases

is

power

today no sound

are reports of officials in control; reports of

object; reports of travelers

fitted or unfitted for

varying education, ideals, and

statements of

What we have

is

swayed

testimony by widely

When science tries to study colonial

all sorts

of hindrances and incomplete

there testimony from the colonial peoples

themselves, or impartial scientific surveys conducted by persons free of

com-

pulsion from imperial control and dictation. d’he studies unsatisfactory.

we have Even the

of colonial peoples and conditions are therefore great African Survey edited by Lord Hailey

680

is

mainly

The Disfranchised Colonies

based on the testimony and the figures of colonial represent the colonial organization,

who

officials; that

are appointed

is,

of men

on recommendation

of persons whose fortunes are tied up with colonial profits, and naturally desirous of

This does not

mean

Other

that there

in this report, or in

made by

only as the government

is

the desire to

is

visitors

and outsiders who can get

them

officials give

what complete and

many others, deliberate make a case for the vested

part of the world’s property-owners.

have been afforded such students in the short of

are

best-possible picture of colonial conditions.

and powerful

studies are

who

making the

and conscious deception; but there interests of a large

who

opportunity.

past,

Many

at the facts

opportunities

but the opportunities

fall far

knowledge demands. Moreover, such

scientific

more or less unconsciously biased by their previous education and contacts, which lead them to regard the natives as on the whole a low order of humanity, and especially to distrust more or less completely the efforts

visitors arrive

native elite,

when through education

and

of conditions, often, and

of educated and aspiring Natives.

The

and contact they get opportunity

to study

naturally, defeat their

own cause

tell

before a prejudiced audience by their bitter-

ness and frustration and their inability to speak with recognized authority.

Thus, unfortunately,

it is

not possible to present or refer to any complete

and documented body of knowledge which can give an undisputed picture of colonies today. This does not mean that we have no knowledge of colonial conditions; on the contrary, we have a vast amount of testimony and study; but practically every

word of it can be and

is

disputed by interested parties, so that

the truth can be reached only by the laborious interpretation of careful students. Nearly every assertion of students of colonial peoples

today by colonial

officials,

many travelers, and

greater unanimity of opinion If,

for instance,

is

growing, but

we complain

is

disputed

a host of theorists. Despite this,

it is

far

from complete.

of the conquest of harmless, isolated, and

independent groups by great powers, it is answered that this is manifest destiny; that the leaders of world civilization must control and guide the

backward peoples

for the

revolting barbarism. If

good of

under

all.

Otherwise these peoples relapse into

this control colonial

peoples are unhappy,

it is

answered that they are happier than they were formerly without control; and that they make greater progress when guided than when left alone.

and forced labor are complained of, the answer is that the natives are congenitally lazy and must be made to work for the good of mankind. Indeed, if they were not enslaved by Europeans, they would enslave each If slavery

other.

Low wages

are justified by the fact that these peoples are simple, with

low standards of living, while their industrialization is a boon to the world, and the world’s welfare is paramount. Lack of broad educational plans is justified by their cost. Can England be asked to undertake the education of British

681

Africa, Pan-Africa,

and Imperialism

when she has not yet fully planned the education of British children at home? Moreover, why educate these simple folk into unhappiness and dis-

Africa

content?

If

they are trained at

benefit of themselves in part

land and dividing

all,

it

should be to produce wealth for the

and of the empire

in general.

The

seizing of the

looked upon not only as a policy which puts unused

it is

acreage into remunerative use, but also as one that compels folk to work otherwise would sing and dance and

sit

in the sun.

And

in general,

who

it is

not

from the testimony of history that the mass of colonial peoples can progress only under the guidance of the civilized white people, and is not the clear

welfare of the whites in reality the welfare of the world? Practically every

one of these

assertions has a certain validity

and

truth,

and misleading enough to give an entirely unfair picture of the colonial world. The recent advance of anthropology, psychology, and other social sciences is beginning to show this, and begin-

and

at the

same time

ning to prove on a

body of

how

is

just false

false a

been

folklore has

premise these assertions are based and built

upon

it.

These

beliefs

how

have been

fatal

influ-

enced by propaganda, by caricature, and by ignorance of the human soul. Today these attitudes must be challenged, and without trying to approach anything

like

completeness of

scientific

statement

we may

allude here to

certain general matters concerning colonial peoples the truth of

cannot be disputed.

.

.

.

682

which

On

The South

African

breaking the strike gold miners.

The

Britain and Africa

Government by which involved strike

began

severe repressive measures succeeded in

nearly two-thirds of the 300,000 African

August

in

last

demand by

year with a

the

Johannesburg gold mine workers for a $ 1 .60 per day wage increase and spread so rapidly that it soon enveloped nearly 200,000 workers. The strikers received considerable support, especially from the Transvaal Municipal African Workers Union and the Indian passive resistance movement of South Africa. Reports from South Africa show that during the period of the strike at least thirty Africans lost their lives

and untold hundreds were

during the brutal suppression of the

strike

Mr. Creech Jones, Secretary of State recent address said: “So far as Britain

today that the old Imperialism has

an end,

to

too,

because

it

come

by the police.

for

Colonies in Great Britain in a

concerned,

is

to

seriously injured

an end.

.

.

I

.

we can assume Imperialism has come think

has been subjected to a pretty fierce criticism by

economists, by socialists and others

who exposed

its

inner content and

made

implied a position of privilege and economic dominance which was unstable and which would bring much danger to mankind if it were clear that

it

persisted in.

“This purpose, so manifest in British policy in recent years, tunately, very a

much

good deal of fierce

misunderstood in the world today. criticism because

we have

We are still

is

unfor-

the butt of

not paraded before the world

the constructive purposes of our administration. There has been, only recently, a

number

of statements by responsible people in American public

life

which Britain has been characterized as an Imperial power pursuing her own material aims and little actuated by the purpose of winning freedom and in

building up the social “It

From

is

life

of the people in the Colonies.

unfortunate, too, that this view

is

the People’s Voice, June 21, 1947.

683

shared by those of Negro descent in

Africa, Pan-Africa,

the United States.

view tends

The

fact

is

there and

to imperil relations

great deal of the

and Imperialism

we must face

it

for the reason that this

between the great nations;

comradeship and the goodwill that ought

it

tends to poison a

to exist

between the

peoples and leads to no end of misunderstanding.”

One hundred years ago, George Maclean died. He was an Englishman who after five wars between the British and the Ashanti, tried to patch up the differences between the tv\'o nations. He was a far-seeing man who in 1831 sent two princes of the Ashanti royal family to

England

to

be educated and

made a treaty of peace between the two nations. Missionaries were introduced into Ashanti. He signed treaties with the Ashanti chiefs and practically recognized the celebrated Bond of 1844 which legalized the relations between the two countries.

684

Whites

in Africa After

Negro Autonomy

change of emphasis has caught my attention recently. Negroes are being accused of racism, that is, of unduly emphasizing racial differences and of advocating racial separation. This would be laughable if it

A

rather curious

A

did not have so serious a side.

now making and

at least

shattered and almost fatally divided world,

desperate effort to envision a humanity

some approach

with

to

brotherhood,

is

bound

together in peace

being warned that

its

worst

victims are contemplating resurgence of race hate!

Of

No

the debt which the white world owes Africa, there can be no doubt.

black

man

can

followers of the

recall

meek and

lowly Jesus stole fifteen million

children from Africa from 1400 to 1900 A.D. and in

America; they

blood and

tears;

left eighty-five

then from 1800 to

by the grace of

day their

this

God and

purity of white

women

words?

could only be secure

— but dismal

truth.

if

for

their trail of

evil

and

him and

and

that a black inferior that

that the virgin

mulatto bastards were strewn

and from the North

So what? Gan

cattle

scientists, historians,

law of nature so

and exploitation were too good to the Pacific

mark

and taught the world

slavery, insult,

from the Atlantic

made them working

million black corpses to

ministers of the Gospel preached, wrote,

man was

The white men, women, and

without a shudder of disgust and hate.

it

bitter

to the

South pole. Harsh

revenge erase

all this? If

Sir

John Hawkins could be caught in West Africa today, even I shudder to think what Ghana might do to this blasphemous hypocrite. But he is beyond hurt today.

Wlien

I

began

my active

contempt shown by white almost incredible. From

.

.

life,

nearly seventy years ago, the open and active

civilization for

Negroes

in the

United States was

.

In Albert Schweitzer’s Realm:

A

Symposium,

Publishers, 1962). pp. 243-255.

685

eel.

A. A.

Roback (Cambridge, Mass.:

Sci-Art

and Imperialism

Africa, Pan-Africa,

19101 could not buy an orchestra

In

seat in

any

New York theater.

could

I

no restaurant downtown. Today, in the southern states of America no white man can marry the colored mother of his child. Most southern Negroes cannot vote, no matter what their education or character. All Negroes belong eat in

to a segregated inferior caste.

The Supreme Court

has ordered segregation to

cease in public schools, but most of the former slaves states have refused to

obey the

law.

In Africa itself color caste in 1928,

.

.

.

is still

the rule. In Sierra Leone,

when was I

the white golf courses than on

more money was spent on

there

Negro

schools.

need hardly mention the status of Negroes in the Union of South .Africa, and in Rhodesia, Kenya, and Tanganyika, as compared with that of whites. In Africa the political liberation of its nations has begun, until we recognize I

.

.

.

in the

United Nations today more than twenty independent African nations.

In the

Union of South

and the Rhodesias there

Africa

to rule the majority of

mination of a minority of whites

Kenya land monopoly

folk. In

Congo we have had

slipping, but

is

the firm deter-

is still

Negroes and colored

persists. In

still

the Belgian

the greatest surprise. Belgium, after depriving the

Con-

golese of everything beyond primary education, has suddenly been forced to yield to a

demand

prime minister was

followed, and yet

slain. Disaster

an independent Negro

state. In spite

of this, Europe and North America have

by no means surrendered their determination vested capital

obtain

among

In fine.

owned by Europeans

to

shape Africa through

in-

or by such black allies as they are able to

the African inhabitants.

West Europe

underpaid labor and the

The

Then the Congolese the Congo is to become

of the Congolese for independence.

determined

is still

virtual theft of

to base

there by Britain and America,

culture and comfort on

land and materials by white investors.

and the Rhodesias

prosperity of South Africa

its

is

which makes huge

due

wealth invested

to the

profits

because of the low

wage paid black labor and the seizure of materials without any recognition of native rights. So long as this method of business and industry persists, the Africans must fight back.

They

not fight the dead past, but the living

will

present.

Naturally, this world treatment of

them and made them writings,

I

men

with black skins has embittered

resentful of the assumptions of white

have often expressed

this feeling.

Today

my

men. In

my own

resentment

at the

doctrine of race superiority, as preached and practiced by the white world for the

last

250

years, has

the charity of Jr.]

who

been pointed

Gandhi and of

to

with sharp criticism and contrasted with

the colored minister [Dr. Martin Luther King,

led the recent boycott in

Alabama.

686

I

am

quite frank:

I

do not pretend

Whites

to “love”

earth.

white people.

I

in Africa After

Negro Autonomy

think that as a race they are the most selfish of any on

think that the history of the world for the

I

last

thousand years proves

this

beyond doubt, and it is more than proven today by the Salvation Army tactics of Toynbee and his school of history. Current history has tried desperately to ignore Africa and its contribution to civilization. Honesty and clarity in historical writing

and research are certainly gaining, but are

still

lacking in the

study of Negro history.

To many Africa,

is

students of race relations the work of missionaries, especially in

some of their satisfaction of David Livingstone. I know of the fine

and hope.

a matter of congratulation

have

read Seavers story

In

share.

I

efforts

of Dr. Schweitzer to rid Africa of disease.

Wliat

just

now

.

I

.

.

has this to do with the prospects of the future?

If

following

Ghana, the new black French states, and the Congo, the peoples of Africa assert themselves and are able to maintain their autonomy, what is going to happen to white Europeans and to North AmeriEthiopia, the Sudan, Liberia,

who live stricken when cans

in Africa? this

in the recent past

Mahdi who

Quite naturally, white thinkers are apt

question

— the

arises.

to

be panic-

They remember some shameful

episodes

action of a great British general in punishing the

ran England out of the

the dead body of this black

man

Sudan

from

its

for a generation.

grave and fed

it

Kitchener dug

to the crocodiles of

Even Churchill called this “a foul deed.” But Britain made Kitchener a viscount. So Frederick Lugard, after a shameful career of murder in Uganda, became a noble British lord and authority on Africa. Chinese Gordon arose from scoundrel in China almost to the Nile to prove the superiority of the white race.

a saint in the British

Sudan.

White Belgians slaughtered natives of the Congo when yesterday they demanded some of the rights of white men. The Union of South Africa has acted like wild beasts toward black folk, and the story of Kenya is a disgrace to Britain. Quite naturally, then, white Europe is asking what Europeans can expect Yet

become free. no program of revenge may occur. And if

ever Africans

this

is

not because the Chris-

taught Africans by whites, while whites enslaved and raped them, will prove to be more efficacious in black consciences than in white, but simply because the black leaders of present Africa are not fools. Haile Selassie,

tianity

Nkrumah, Azikiwe, Toure, and even Tubman well aware that the worst oppressors

are

men

of reason, d hey are

and enslavers of Africa are

dead, and cannot today be harmed by belated revenge, d’hey are white people in France, Britain,

in vast

know

and America who can be

majoriN

that there just,

and

Negroes see also that the Soviet Union, China, Poland, and Czechoslovakia — have proved that some white nations can treat colored people as brothers

687

Africa, Pan-Africa,

.can view

men

They

and

real

see

as

feel

communism

men

and Imperialism

even though they are black, yellow, or red

as Russia.

each day the-mighty flood rolling toward socialism and of mankind, and that in no

and others being trained

to

succeed them,

far distant day.

These

will act with reason if

not without difficulties, not without seeing

many

to a

leaders,

permitted



of their dark fellows yield to

which once lured Tunis, Morocco, and Algeria to their doom, and today have a stranglehold on Liberia and are seeking investments in South, Central, and West Africa. But there is a wise portion of the peoples of Africa of Ghana and Nigeria, of South African blacks, and of American Negroes who glimpse a straight path. Africa needs capital goods to promote industry and break the capitalistic fetters on cheap crops and labor, and the processing of goods abroad and resale to the natives in the form of gin and baubles at fabulous prices. Africa needs sanitation and medicine; she needs agriculture for crops suited to her own wants and the conservation of power for her own factories. This capital the seductions of Western capitalism,

she can borrow

— she

is

begged today

to

borrow

it

from Britain and the United

States at 10 or even 100 percent interest; but there lies disaster, is

beginning

sacrifice

to realize.

This capital she can herself save in

and amid the cheerful sneers of white

Africa saves

its

own

capital in part, or borrows

tourists

it

and

this Africa

but

part,

at cruel

and students. Yet

from lands

if

like the Soviet

Union and China at rates far below the debt slavery offered by the United States, Britain, and West Germany, her chances of survival are good. That this is possible, China can tell her: Egypt is learning; even India begins to suspect. Africa knows that this kind of revenge on her traducers will far exceed in satisfaction any petty deeds inspired by hate of the dead and the dying — of the dead slave-traders and of the dying corporations of exploiters and thieves who are working today.

happen to white folk in Africa when black folk rule their depends on what white folks do, and do now. And the whites to

What, then,

own

territory

whom

I

will

refer are not the

white world as a whole.

dead nor simply those living

We

are

come

to a

time

when

in Africa.

I

refer to the

the sins and mistakes of

the whole group must be considered and judged, not simply small localities or single individuals. Perhaps in the fifteenth century, slavery of Negroes guilt

was the

mainly of certain individuals. But today, the poverty of the majority of

human

beings, the war, murder,

and destruction due

to colonial imperialism,

cannot be charged simply against the Union of South Africa, or the white owners of Kenya land, or the Dutch monopolists of Indonesia. No. The real culprits are the British cartel

owners

who form

and American shareholders

in corporations, the rich

the aristocracy of France and

paid leaders of labor unions

who exclude

colonial folk.

688

or

Germany, and the wellsegregate Negroes and other

Whites

It is

fruit,

folk like these

and sugar

in

who

in Africa After

Negro Autonomy

finance race hate in Africa; grow rich on coffee,

Central and South America; and plead innocence of wrong

because they “do not know” what investment, incorporated business, stock markets, and world trade are doing to mankind.

crime which

is

devastating the earth.

It is

It is

their business to

know the

hard to point to examples of this

in

income and profit are the closely guarded secrets of the modern world. Yet here is one instance revealed in the soliciting of further investment: in one year Northern Rhodesia sold its copper product for $36,000,000. Of this income, one half went to British and American shareholders, part based on old but quite baseless claims of “ownership” and business and industr}^ Individual

on “investment” and stock gambling. Two and one-half million dollars went to 1,690 white artisans, at $15,000 each for the year. They worked as part

trained technicians, but most of their actual

toil

performed by Negro helpers. The whites lived

and part of

like little lords

their skill

and had

all

was the

cheap house service which they wanted, with modern homes and the right to vote. They had a recognized union, to which no Negro could belong. Less than 2 percent of the total 36 millions of income from copper, $632,000, or $37 each a year, was paid to 17,000 African laborers, who did the bulk of the

and whose fathers had once owned the land and its fruits. The nations and individuals whose life, culture, power, and luxury rest on this colossal theft are

toil

the persons responsible for the present plight of Rhodesia.

This

is

abundantly proven

in the case of the

Congo. The Congo needed

technical leadership and professional knowledge. Particularly were physicians

needed; but

when

the Belgians contemplated medical schools, they found

had not furnished enough training so that educated Congolese could be given a course in modern medicine; and of course neither Belgium nor Europe could spare white physicians for black that their system of education

Africa in any adequate numbers.

As black Africa grows

.

.

.

in strength, unity,

and

intelligence, this plan of

building white wealth and culture on Negro poverty and exploitation must cease. It may cease as a result of study, the spread of conference, and the

strengthening of moral fiber in the world.

Or

it

may come from

the lessening

of profit on African exploitation and monopoly, and the realization, due to

African organization and intelligence, that in the future European civilization will depend on European labor and not on cheap colored labor abroad.

may be helped by the realization on the part of Africans that their freedom will not come as a gift from white folk, but as a result of what they themselves sacrifice and do. Or again maybe the only way to bring South Africa to its senses is for West Africa to drop atom bombs on Cape down, Progress

Johannesburg, and Salisbury, secure in the hope that Britain and the United Cod States will not dare to interfere because of the Soviet Union and China.

689

Africa, Pan-Africa,

and Imperialism

forbid that this awful catastrophe should ever threaten; but

if it

does, the best

people of Europe and America, living and carousing on the degradation of Africa, will bear the blame. It is

more

likely that reason

and decency

For

will prevail.

we may

this,

count on present African leadership. Every current black leader begs reform by consultation, compromise, peace, and the rule of All-African meeting at Accra,

West Africa, which culminated

right. five

The

for

great

Pan-African

congresses held in Europe, 1919 to 1945, indicated a settled determination on

Cape

the part of the Africans from Algeria and Egypt to the

be

domination and

free of foreign

of Good

to unite to secure this great end.

This conference was an outstanding success. There prevailed a

brotherhood and co-operation with attitude lasting forever.

“We have been

said:

no

all

.

.

spirit

of

As Mboya, the remarkable young Kenyan chairman,

slapped down;

we have turned

the other cheek; there

is

compromise, then, must

action and thought, investigation and research, and that not by Euro-

peans alone but by African scholars and thinkers. There must a

.

to

the world. But let us not count on this

third cheek!” For continuance of this spirit of

come

Hope

new crop

rise in

America

of men of courage to supplant the present plethora of cowards and

The “Church

pussyfooters in high places.

of Christ” must

of Man, organized for honesty and right doing

and show. Above

all,

civilized

man must

when

a

Church

— and not for dogma, miracles,

learn

and acknowledge that not

individual wealth, but decent living for the masses

There was

become

is

the chief end of

man.

the world rightly called Americans honest, even

if

crude

— earning their living by hard work, telling the truth no matter whom

it

hurt,

and going

a day

to

war only

for

what they believed

in, a just

cause, after

nothing but force seemed possible. Today millions of us are lying, stealing,

and

killing.

We

call all this

by

finer

names: Advertising, Free Enterprise, and

we use science to help us deceive our fellows; we take wealth that we never earned; and we are devoting our vast energy to prepare ourselves to kill, maim, and drive insane — men, women, and children who dare refuse to do what we want done. Some profess to know why we fail. They say we haven’t taught our children mathematics and physics. No, it is because we have not taught our National Defense. But names in the end deceive no one; today

children to read and write or to behave like

human

beings and not like

my street is whooping it up with toy guns, and the pistols. When Elvis Presley goes through his suggestive

hoodlums. Every child on big boys with real

motions on the public

stage,

children from hysteria.

it

The

takes the city police force to hold back teen-age

story of the rigged

TV

quizzes completes the

picture of our spiritual decadence.

The

highest ambition of an American boy today

highest ambition of an American

girl

is

to

690

is

be a movie

to

be a millionaire. The

star.

Of the

ethical

aims

Whites

which

back of these

lie

in Africa After

ideals, little

is

Negro Autonomy

said or learned.

What

we doing

are

Half the.Christian churches of New York are trying to ruin the free public schools in order to install religious dogma in them, and the other half, are too interested in Venezuelan oil to prevent the best center in Brooklyn from fighting youthful delinquency, or to stop a bishop from kicking William

about

it?

Howard Melish

and closing his church. Which of the hundreds

into the street

empty

of churches sitting half

protests

about

this?

They

hire Billy

Graham

to

replace the circus in Madison Square Garden.

comes today mainly from Gommunists. The spread of education and science comes from Gommunists. The saner distribution of wealth is the object of Gommunism. Is this why we hate Gommunism and persecute its followers? The greatest threat of war comes

On

the other hand, the plea for peace

from the United States and from its support of colonial imperialism. Why is this? Is it because the United States built its wealth on the blood and slavery of Africans?

among

Is this

why

color caste and race hate persist

the rest of mankind?

We may not delude

among

us as

it

fades

ourselves into silence based

on undoubted progress in American race relations during the last fifty years, culminating in a Supreme Gourt decision which is not yet enforced, or on favors to Negroes in return for their acquiescence in national policies which continue to spell ruin exploit each other

is

for the

colored peoples of the world. Not freedom to

the salvation of black America, but understanding and

fellowship with the oppressed laborers of all the world. If this is true, then on of the United States more than on any nation in the world lies the burden effort for

end,

all

^

peace on

earth.”

The freedom

Americans, Negroes

This word of mine

is

no

of Africa depends on us, and to this

as well as whites, effort to detract

should prepare

for action.

from the beneficial work of

They have done good and harm. The work of men like Dr. Schweitzer in medicine deserves all praise. The missionary of medicine is needed even sorely needed in Africa. But the defenders of manhood are missionaries.

more. look for peace and good will as Africa strives for freedom. I firmly believe white world that this day will come. But it will come and succeed only if the I

honestly co-operates, only

away and

if

the

European

a broader, better ideal of

itch for profits at

human

any price

dies

hope

this

relations succeeds.

I

coming will not be automatic^ it will be in great part will because men like Dr. Schweitzer aid and openly and clearly advocate it. It as be because Dr. Schweitzer would not only treat disease but train Negroes

change

will

assistants

come, but

its

and helpers, surround himself with

growing African

staff

of scien-

who can in time carry on and spread his work and by the new African states and does not continue to be

tifically

educated natives

see that

it is

supported

a

dependent on European

charity.

That would be fundamental and

691

lasting

Africa, Pan-Africa,

and Imperialism

missionary work and not mere almsgiving and paternalistic feeding of chil-

dren from a

have

silver

spoon.

returned from

weeks

West Africa.

I

black folk and under a culture which they created.

I

I

just

[Kwame Nkrumah]

six

in

have seen

in the

land of

a black

man

with ancient and beautiful ceremony installed as the

head of an independent African

state,

capitalists.

I

and

I

have seen him send his black

Congolese from being overwhelmed by Belgian am thrilled and hopeful from all this which I have

soldiers to save the struggling

and American

have lived

seen.

692

-/Vlthough he abhorred war, Du Bois, unlike NAACP founders Mary White Ovington and Oswald Garrison Villard, was not an ethical or ideological pacifist. As with his views on racial integration and working-class solidarity, what

finally

mattered most to

him was

the

civil rights

advantage his people

could derive from a given position. Lynchings in the South, a three-day race riot in East St. Louis, and a murderous nighttime march on Houston by

African-American infantry occurred on the eve of American entry into World War One. The African-American leadership debated the wisdom of making civil

rights

demands

the sine qua

non of

full

participation in the

war or

bank on exemplary patriotism as the prudent course for racial advancement. After some soul-searching and the offer of a commission in

whether

Army

to

Military Intelligence, the

NAACP’s most important

voice spoke for

support of the war effort in July 1918. “Close Ranks,” probably Du Bois’s most famous Crisis editorial, outraged William Monroe Trotter, Archibald Grimke,

Randolph, and many other influential African-Americans. Instead of abating, and notwithstanding the creditable performance of black soldiers (“An Essay Toward a History of the Black Man in the Great War [1919]),

A. Philip

racism generally increased in the United States in the immediate aftermath of the war.

Having observed firsthand during 1936 the troubling and “complicated” developments of Germany and Hitler, Du Bois gauged the menace posed by the Third Reich better than molders of African-American public opinion.

If

would be subjected to “an attempted in July caste system resembling slavery,” he predicted in the Amsterdam News he 1941 The Second World War raised old dilemmas again. With misgivings, Hitler

won

the war, Africans and Asians

.

695

War and Peace

decided 1942,

to repeat his

1918

summons

to the colors, proclaiming, in

February

We close ranks again but only, now as then, to fight for democracy and

democracy not only for white folk but for yellow, brown and black” [“Closing Ranks Again ]. In The Negro and the War,” Du Bois remained guardedly hopeful of the outcome, opining in the Amsterdam News for May 9, 1942, “1 said

some time

since that

than he got out of the

I

last;

feared that the

but

I

think

I

Negro would

get less out of this

war

was wrong.” Writing up the balance

Negros War Gains and Losses” [1945], a stoic Du Bois decided that he could not say balancing these losses and gains, [that] the war has been sheet in

either a vast success or a terrible failure.”

696

Close Ranks

This

is

the

crisis

of the world. For

the year 1918 as the great

whether

it

would submit

peace

it

could be called

if

Day

all

of Decision, the

to military

come men will point to day when the world decided

the long years to

despotism and an endless armed peace



— or whether they would put down the menace of

militarism and inaugurate the United States of the World. of the colored race have no ordinary interest in the outcome. That

German

We

which the German power represents today spells death to the aspirations of Negroes and all darker races for equality, freedom and democracy. Let us not and close our hesitate. Let us, while this war lasts, forget our special grievances the allied ranks shoulder to shoulder with our own white fellow citizens and nations that are fighting for democracy.

make

it

From The

gladly

and

We make no ordinary sacrifice, but we

willingly with our eyes lifted to the hills.

Crisis, July 1918.

An Essay Toward

History of

a

Man

the Black

in the

Great War

The mayor

Domfront stood in the village inn, high on the hill that hovers green in the blue sky of Normandy; and he sang as we sang: Allans, enfants de la patrier God! How we sang! How the low, grey-clouded room rang with the of

''

strong voice of the

little

Frenchman

in the corner,

swinging his arms in deep

emotion; with the vibrant voices of a score of black American officers who sat round about. Their hearts were swelling torn in sunder. Never have I seen



black folk

— and

I

have seen

many — so

bitter

and disillusioned

democracy dawning on them The mayor apologized gravely:

me

have received

how could memories?

explain in

I

I

in France. if

could not



I

my coming, he would Ville — me whom most of my

he had known of

formally at the Hotel de

fellow-countrymen receive

seem-

— so uplifted at the vision of

ingly bottomless depths of American color hatred real

at the

naught but back doors, save with apology. But Domfront, that reborn feudal town of ancient did not. But I sang the Marseillaise — “Le jour de at

gloire est arriver

— but not yet to us. “Jim-Crow” — in a hotel

Arrived to the world and to ever widening circles of men

Up yonder for

hill,

transported bodily from America,

sits

white officers only; in a Massachusetts Colonel

and segregates them openly and ing

at every opportunity; in the

officially stigmatizes his

them never

to

speak to French

black officers as no gentlemen by order-

women

neously offered social recognition. All

and

insult in a purling sea of

From The

Crisis,

who frankly hates “niggers” General from Georgia who

this

in public or receive the sponta-

ancient and American race hatred

French sympathy and kindliness, of

June 1919.

698

human

An

uplift

Essay Toward a History of the Black

Man

in the

Great

War

and giant endeavor, amid the mightiest crusade humanity ever saw

for

Justice!

Contre nous de

la tyrannic,

Uetendard sanglant

This, then, years of groes.

is

a

first

attempt

1914-1919 meant

It is

only an attempt,

in part.

And

full

place of skulls,

yet, written it

of the Hell which war in the fateful

Black Folk, and particularly

to

and many necessarily missing foil

at the story

est leve.

to

American Ne-

of the mistakes which nearness to the scene

facts,

now

such

as

only time can supply, combine to

in the heat of strong

memories and

in the

contains truth which cold delay can never alter or bring

back. Later, in the light of official reports and supplementary information and

with a corps of co-workers, consisting of officers and soldiers and scholars, I shall revise and expand this story into a volume for popular reading; and still later,

hope to lay before historians and sociologists upon which my final views are based.

with the passing of years,

the documents and

statistics

I

SENEGALESE AND OTHERS. and, thank God, must be, disillusion. This war has disillusioned them with its disillusioned millions of fighting white men

To everyone war

is,



wet and discomfort; murder, maiming and hatred. But the disillusion of Negro American troops was more than this, or the flat, frank realization that however high the rather it was this and more

frank truth of

dirt,

disease, cold,



ideals of America or

however noble her

tasks,

her great duty as conceived by

an astonishing number of able men, brave and good,

as well as of other sorts of

men, is to hate “niggers.” Not that this double disillusion has for a moment made black men doubt again, the wisdom of their wholehearted help of the Allies. Given the chance they would again do their duty — for have they not seen and known France? But these young men see today with opened eyes and strained faces the true and hateful visage of the Negro problem

in

Wlien the German host — grey, grim,

America.

irresistible,

poured through Bel-

gium, out of Africa France called her sons; they came; 280,000 black Senegalese, first and last — volunteers, not drafted; they hurled the Bodies It back across the Ourcq and the Marne on a ghastly bridge of their own dead. was was the crisis — four long, bitter years the war wore on; but Germany Belgians, beaten at the first battle of the Marne, and by Negroes. Beside the mention the 20,000 too, stood, first and last, 30,000 black Gongolese, not to

699

War and Peace

who fought in who conquered German Africa.

black English West Indians troops

the East and the thousands of black

STEVEDORES But the

story of stories

that of the

is

American Negro. Here was

bravely let his head go where his heart at

time

as a nation within a

first

could not follow,

nation did his bitter duty because

a

man who

who for the first it

was

his duty,

knowing what might be expected, but scarcely foreseeing the whole

We

gained the right

Crowed and the

first

insulted;

we were

training

officers

servants in the

to fight for civilization at the cost of

Navy and

segregated in the draft;

we were

camp; and we were allowed

as

common

laborers in the

truth.

being “Jim-

segregated in

to volunteer

only as

Army, outside of the four

Negro regiments. The Army wanted stevedores, road builders, wood choppers, railroad hands, etc., and American Negroes were among the first to volunteer. Of the 200,000 Negroes in the American Expeditionary Eorce, approximately 150,000 were stevedores and laborers, doing the hardest work under, in some cases, the most trying conditions faced by any soldiers during regular

the war.

And

it is

the verdict of

men who know

that the

most

efficient

and

remarkable service has been rendered by these men. Patient, loyal, intelligent, not grouchy, knowing all that they were up against among their countrymen

enemy, these American black men won the war as perhaps no other set of S.O.S. men of any other race or army won it. Where were these men stationed? At almost every seaport in Erance and in some English ports; at many of the interior depots and bases; at the various assembling places where automobiles, airplanes, cars and locomotives were as well as the

got ready for use; in the forests,

on the mountains and in the valleys, cutting wood; building roads from ports of entry right up to the view and touch of

Germans own lives

in the front-lines;

burying the dead; salvaging

at great risk to their

and other dangerous war material, actually piling up and detonating the most deadly devices in order that French battlefields might be safe to those who walk the ways of peace. millions of shells

Who commanded

these thousands of black

men

of the United States and representing in culture illiterates

from under-taught Southern States

to

assembled from

all

the

way from absolute

well-educated

southern private schools and colleges and even from

parts

all

many

men from

northern univer-

and colleges? By a queer h\'ist of American reasoning on the Negro assumed that he is best known and best “handled” by white people from sities

South,

who more

association that

than any other white people refuse and

condemn

the

that sort of

would most surely acquaint the white man with the very

700

it is

best

An

that

is

in the

S.O.S. men,

white

Essay Toward a History of the Black

Negro. Therefore, it

officers.

drivers of the

The

when

seems that there was Some of these were

most offensive

officers

were

in the

to

Great

be chosen

War

for the

Negro

a preference expressed or felt for southern

fine

men, but the majority were

“nigger”

type.

outstanding fact about the

big,

Man

command

of these colored soldiers

is

method and so forced it that it became unpopular for officers to be generous to these men. When it is considered that these soldiers were abjectly under such men, with no practical opportunity for redress, it is easy to imagine the extremes to which that southern

men of a

narrow, harsh type dictated the policy and

harsh treatment could be carried. So thoroughly understood was it that the Negro had to be “properly handled and kept in his place,” even in France, large use was

made even

many

of the white non-commissioned officer so that

Negro soldiers had no higher Negro command than corporal. This harsh method showed itself in long hours, excessive tasks, little opportunity for leaves and recreation, holding of black soldiers to barracks when in the same community white soldiers had the privilege of the town, severe punishments for slight offenses, abusive language and sometimes corpo-

companies and

units of

punishment. To such extremes of handling niggers was this carried that Negro Y.M.C.A. secretaries were refused some units on the ground, frankly

ral

stated by officers, that

it

would be

places separate ‘T” huts were there

would be no

Worked

better to

demanded

have white

for

between the

insulted,

and

and fourteen hours

yet they saw the vision

in

many

races.

a day, these

well-fed, poorly clad, indifferently housed, often beaten, always

and

and

white and colored soldiers so that

association or fraternizing

often like slaves, twelve

secretaries,

— they

men

were

“Jim-Crowed”

saw a nation of splendid

people threatened and torn by a ruthless enemy; they saw a democracy which simply could not understand color prejudice. They received a thousand little kindnesses and half-known words of sympathy from the puzzled French, and French law and custom stepped in repeatedly to protect them, so that their



how they only regret was the average white American. But they worked worked! Everybody joins to testify to this: the white slave-drivers, the army officers, the

French, the

laborer in France, of

all

visitors

- all say that the American Negro was the best

the world

s

peoples gathered there; and

if

food and materials saved France in the end from utter exhaustion,

Negro stevedore who made

American it

was the

that aid effective.

THE

8 0

5

TH

To illustrate the kind of work which the stevedore and pioneer regiments we cite the history of one of the pioneer Negro regiments: Under the act

did,

701

of

War and Peace

May

18, 1917, the President

ordered the formation of eight colored infantry

Two of these, the 805th and 806th, were organized at Camp Funston. The 805th became a Pioneer regiment and when it left camp had 3,526 men and 99 officers. It included 25 regulars from the 25th Infantry of regiments.

the Regular Army, 38 mechanics from Prairie View, 20 horse-shoers from

Tuskegee and 8 carpenters from Howard. The regiment was drilled and had target practice. The regiment proceeded to Camp Upton late in August, 1918, and sailed, a part from Montreal and a part from Quebec, Canada, early in September. Early

October the whole regiment arrived in the southern end of the Argonne forest. The men began their work of repairing roads as follows: (a)

(b)

2,000 meters of Clermont-Neuvilly road from Clermont road

First

past

in

Apremont;

Second 2,000 meters of Clermont-Neuvilly

road, Charpentry cut-

off road; (c)

Locheres crossroad on Clermont-Neuvilly road, north 2,000 meters,

roads at Very;

(d)

Clermont-Neuvilly road from point 1,000 south of Neuvilly bridge to Neuvilly, ammunition detour road at Neuvilly, Charpentry roads;

(e)

Auzeville railhead, Varennes railhead; railhead work at and Briquenay;

(f)

Roads

at

Avocourt, roads at Sommerance;

(h)

Roads

at

Avocourt, roads

work March and railroad from November

(k)

at Fleville;

Construction of ammunition dump, Neuvilly, and railhead construction between Neuvilly and Varennes and Apremont, railroad repair

(j)

Juvin

Auzeville railhead, Varennes railhead, roads at Montblainville, roads at Landros-St. Ceorge;

(g)

(i)

St.

St.

Juvin, construction of Verdun-Etain

11;

Railhead details and road work Aubreville, road work Varennes and Charpentry;

Road and railhead work Aubreville, road work Varennes.

he outlying companies were continually in immediate sight of the sausage balloons and witnessed many an air battle. Raids were frequent. 1

A concentration

had been ordered at Varennes, November 18, and several companies had taken up their abode there or at Camp Mahout, but to carry out the salvage program, a redistribution over the Argonne-Meuse area had to be affected immediately.

The

area assigned the 805th Pioneer Infantry extended from Boult-auxBois, almost due south to a point one kilometre west of Les Islettes; thence to

702

All

Essay Toward a History of the Black

Man

in the

Great

War

Aubreville and Avocourt and Esnes; thence to Montfancon via Bethinconrt

and Cuisy; thence north through Nantillois and Cunel southwest through Romagne, Gesnes and Exermont

to Bantlieville;

to the

thence

main road

south of Eleville; and then nortli to Boult-aux-Bois througli Eleville,

St.

just

Juvin,

Grand Pre and Briquenay.

The area comprised all

of the

Argonne

forest,

Varennes-Malancourt-Montfaucon-Romagne

from Glermont north and the

sections.

More than

five

hun-

dred square miles of battlefield was included.

A list of the

articles to

be salvaged would require

a page. Ghiefly they

were

and enemy weapons and cannon, web and leather equipment, clothing and blankets, rolling stock, aviation electrical and engineer equipment. It was a gigantic task and did not near completion until the first week in March

y\llied

when more than

3,000 Erench carloads had been shipped.

Eor some weeks truck transportation was scarce and work was slow and consisted largely in getting material to roadsides.

As companies of the 805th neared the completion of their areas they were put to work at the railheads where they helped load the salvage they had gathered and that which

and sent

it

on

its

way

many

to designated depots.

With the slackening of

when

it

was possible

agricultural books

other organizations of the area had brought,

to

the salvage work, the regiment found a few days

devote time to drilling, athletics and study. School and

were obtained

in large

numbers and each company

orga-

nized classes which, though not compulsory, were eagerly attended by the

men. work was necessitated by instructions from Advance Section Headquarters to assist in every way possible the restoration of Erench farmlands to a point where they could be cultivated. This meant principally the filling of trenches across fields and upon this Gurtailment of

this

work the regiment entered March

1

5

with

all its

strength, except

what was

required for the functioning of the railheads not yet closed. There was up to this time no regimental band.

instruments had been requisitioned, but had not arrived before the regiment left. Efforts were made to enlist a colored band at Kansas Gity whose members wished to enter the Army as a band and be assigned to

At

Gamp b unston

the 805th Pioneer Infantry. General

with the

War Department.

Wood

Qualified assent was obtained, but subsequent

rulings prevented taking advantage of for

approved and took the matter up

it,

in

view of the early date anticipated

an overseas move.

Europe precluded immediorders had been ate attention being given the matter and, meanwhile, general issued against equipping bands not in the Regular Army.

The

rush of events

when

the regiment reached

703

War and Peace

Left to

own

without divisional connections, the regiment had to rely upon

itself,

The men needed music after the hard work they were doing and Colonel Humphrey sent his Adjutant to Paris to present the matter to the Y.M.C.A., Knights of Columbus and Red Cross. The Red Cross was able to respond immediately and Captain Bliss reits

resources for diversion.

turned January

1,

1919, with seven cornets, six clarinets, five saxophones, four

trombones, four

slide

and, also,

some

alto horns,

band

“jazz

two bass tubas, two baritones and a piccolo

effect.”

The band was

organized on the spot and as more instruments and music were obtained, eventually reached almost its tabular strength while it reached proficiency almost over night.

The

following

commendation of the work of

“The Chief Engineer your regiment

desires to express his highest appreciation to

for the services

rendered to the

between the Meuse and the Argonne, ation of that offensive

November

the regiment was received:

on November

starting 1

1st

Army

September

26,

you and

to

in the offensive

and the continu-

and concluding with the Armistice of

1 1.

“The success of the operations of the Army Engineer Troops toward constructing and maintaining supply lines, both roads and railway, of the Army was in no small measure made possible by the excellent work performed by your troops. “It

is

desired that the terms of this letter be published to

men

enlisted

A

of your

command

all

the officers and

at the earliest opportunity.”

soldier writes us:

“Our regiment is composed of colored and white officers. You will find a number of complimentary things on the regiment s record in the Argonne in the history. We were, as you know, the fighting reserves of the Army and that we were right on this front from September to November 1 1 We kept the lines of communication going and, of course, we were raided and shelled by .

Cerman

We

long-range guns and subject to gas raids, too.

now

are

Meuse. This

is

located in the Ardennes, between the

a wild

our homes in May.

and wooly

forest,

I

assure you.

We

Argonne and the are hoping to reach

We

have spent over seven months in this section of the battle-front and we are hoping to get started home in a few weeks after you get this letter, at least.

and

Our regiment

is

the best advertised regiment in the A.E.F.

members are from all over the United States practically. A month or so ago we had a pay-day here and twenty thousand its

collected the

first

day and sent

to relatives

and banks

in the

dollars

United

was

States.

Every day our mail sergeant sends from one hundred to one thousand dollars per day to the United States for the men in our regiment, savings of the



704

An

Essay Toward a History of the Black

Man

in the

Great

War

small salary they receive as soldiers. As a whole they are and have learned

many

things by having

had

war experience.”

this great

NEGRO OFFICERS was expected. America knows the value of Negro labor. Negroes knew the that in this war as in every other war they would have the drudgery and not be the end and dirt, but with set teeth they determined that this should

All this

They did not make the mistake of seeking to escape they knew that modern war is mostly ordinary toil; they even took

limit of their service. labor, for

without protest the the

that black

first

lion’s share of the

men must

common

serve as soldiers

labor, but they insisted

and

from

officers.

white Negro-hating oligarchy was willing to have some Negro the privilege of being shot in real war being one which they were sokjiers provided these black men did not get too much easily persuaded to share

The





notoriety out of

it.

But against Negro

officers they set their faces like flint.

insistence of the Negroes, backed eventually by the unexdecision of Secretary Baker, encompassed the first defeat of this

The dogged pected

oligarchy and nearly one thousand colored officers were commissioned.

Immediately a persistent campaign began: First,

Negro

was the

effort to get rid of Negro officers;

second, the effort to discredit

soldiers; third, the effort to spread race prejudice in

France; and fourth,

the effort to keep Negroes out of the Regular Army. First and foremost, war is war and military organization tyranny. This

is,

and must be, of war and the

is,

perhaps, the greatest and most barbarous cost

most pressing reason

for

its

abolition from civilization. As war

means

tyranny,

company officer is largely at the mercy of his superior officers. The company officers of the colored troops were mainly colored. The field of the colored officers, officers were with very few exceptions white. The fate higher command. therefore, depended almost absolutely on those placed in

the

Moreover, American military

may be

grossly unfair.

determined and

They

trials

and

legal procedures are antiquated

give the accused

little

chance

if

and

the accuser

is

influential.

Negro troops depended first of all on their field and training there was no officers; given strong, devoted men of knowledge and organize doubt of their being able to weed out and train company officers the body of fighters on the western front. This was precisely what

The

success, then, of the

the best

Negro-haters feared. Above

all,

they feared Charles Young.

705

War and Peace

CHARLES YOUNG There was one man justice, efficiency

in the

United States

and long,

Army who by

faithful service

command of a division of colored troops. He

is

one of the best

most efficient

in the

physical reason

Regular Army. as instructor

(

He

Under him

Army. This

the

Negro

rightful place

division

a graduate

officers in the

would have been the

was denied him. For

a technical

high blood pressure”) he was quickly retired from the was not allowed a minor command or even a chance to act

during the war.

the contrary, the 92d and 93d Divisions of

Commanding

Officers

who

Negro troops were given

with a half-dozen exceptions either distrusted

Negroes or actively and persistently opposed colored cumstances. The 92d Division particularly was made poor and inexperienced

number of these white making the

is

has served in Cuba, Haiti, the Philippines, Mexico, Africa and

the West with distinction.

On

should have been given the

Colonel Charles Young

of West Point and by universal admission

Army.

every consideration of

lot

a

from the

first

under any

dumping ground

seeking promotion.

field officers

officers

officers

A

cir-

for

considerable

spent more time and ingenuity in

of the Negro officer hard and the chance of the Negro soldier

limited than in preparing to

whip the Cermans.

PREJUDICE These tion in

under various heads: giving the colored officers no instruccertain lines and then claiming that none were fitted for the work, as in

efforts fell

artillery

and engineering;

persistently picking the poorest

instead of the best for examinations

and

tests

so as to

Negro candidates make any failure

conspicuous; using court martials and efficiency boards for trivial offenses and wholesale removals of the Negroes; subjecting Negro officers and men to

and discrimination by refusing salutes, “}im-Crowing” places of accommodation and amusement, refusing leaves, etc.; by failing to supply persistent insult

the colored troops with proper a systematic attempt to

and compel them

These

equipment and decent clothing; and finally by poison the minds of the French against the Negroes

to follow the dictates of

are serious charges.

The

full

American prejudice. proof of them cannot be attempted

here, but a few examples will serve to indicate the nature of the proof. At the colored Officers’ Training Camp no instruction was given in artillery

and

was established by which no one was commissioned higher than Captain, despite several recommendations. Certain Captains’ positions, a dead-line

like those of the

Headquarters Companies, w'ere reserved

706

for whites,

and

An

Essay Toward a History of the Black

former non-commissioned

officers

Man

in the

Great War

were given preference

they would be more tractable than college-bred

witli

the

men — a hope

hope

that

that nsnally

proved delusive.

The

colored divisions were never assembled as units this side of the water.

General Ballou, a timid, changeable white man, was put 92d Division and he antagonized it from the beginning. General Ballou’s attitude toward the

men

of his

in

command

command,

of the

as expressed in

famous, or rather infamous. Bulletin 35, which was issued during the period of training in the United States, was manifested throughout the divi-

his

sion during the entire time that he was in

command

in

France.

Whenever any

occasion arose where trouble had occurred between white and colored soldiers, the burden of proof always rested on the colored man. All discrimina-

was passed unnoticed and nothing was done to protect the men who were under his command. Previous to General Bullard’s suggestion that some order be issued encouraging the troops for the good work that they had done

tion

on the Vosges and Marbache fronts, there had been nothing done to encourage the men and officers, and it seemed that instead of trying to increase the morale of the division, it was General Ballou’s intention to discourage the

much as possible. His action in censuring officers in the presence of enlisted men was an act that tended toward breaking down the confidence that the men had in their officers, and he pursued this method on innumer-

men

as

On

one occasion he referred to his division, in talking to another officer, as the “rapist division”; he constantly cast aspersion on the work of the colored officer and permitted other officers to do the same in his

able occasions.

presence, as

is

evidenced by the following incident which took place in the

office of the Assistant

The cers

staff

just

Staff,

G-3, at Bourbon-les-Bains:

been organized and

several

General Headquarters

offi-

Headquarters advising relative to the organization of the different These officers were in conversation with General Ballou, Golonel

were

offices.

had

Ghief of

at

Major Hickox, and Brigadier-General Hay. In the In course of the conversation Brigadier-General Hay made the remark that my opinion there is no better soldier than the Negro, but God damn a uigger Ballou and was the officer”! This remark was made in the presence of General

Greer, the Ghief of

occasion for

much

Staff,

laughter.

92nd Division moved from the Argonne forest to the Marbache place Sector the 368th Infantry was held in reserve at Pompey. It was at this After the

that

General Ballou ordered

all

of the enlisted

men and

officers of this unit to

had congregate and receive an address to be delivered to them by him. No one the any idea as to the nature of this address; but on the afternoon designated,

men and and the

officers

officers

assembled on the ground, which was used

were severely censured

as a drill-ground,

relative to the operation that

707

had taken

War and Peace

place in the Argonne forest. of the enlisted failed;

and

was made

men,

advised the offieers, in the presenee

that in his opinion they

were cowards; that they had

that “they did not have the guts” that

made brave men. This speech

to the offieers in the

and was an

Infantry

The General

men

presenee of all of the enlisted

aet eontrary to

traditions of the

all

of the 368th

Army.

When

Mr. Ralph Tyler, the aeeredited correspondent of the War Department, reached the Headquarters of the 92d Division and was presented to General Ballou, he was received with the utmost indifference and nothing was done

to

enable him to reaeh the units

at the front in order to

gain the

information whieh he desired. After Mr. Tyler was presented to General Ballou, the General walked out of the office of the Ghief of Staff with Mr. Tyler,

eame

into the offiee of the Adjutant,

where

all

men who was

of the enlisted

worked, and stood directly in front of the desk of the eolored

offieer,

seated in the office of the Adjutant, and in a loud voiee said to Mr. Tyler:

regard the eolored officer as a distinet failure. the

traits

whieh go

the presenee of

enough

for all of

to

make

He

a suceessful officer.”

is

“I

eowardly and has none of

This expression was

made

in

of the enlisted personnel and in a tone of voiee loud

all

them

to hear.

General Ballou’s Ghief of Staff was a white Georgian and from first to last his malign influenee was felt and he openly sought politieal influence to antagonize his

own

General to

troops.

Gommanding

,

Major Patterson

Offieer of the

(92d Division), said

(colored). Division Judge-Advoeate, that there was a

coneerted aetion on the part of the white offieers throughout Franee to diseredit the work of the eolored troops in Franee and that everything was

being done to advertise those things that would reflect discredit upon the men and offieers and to withhold anything that would bring to these men praise or

On

eommendation.

the afternoon of

awarded

November

8,

the Distinguished Service Gross was

Lieutenant Gampbell and Private Bernard Lewis, 368th Infantry, the presentation of which was made with the preseribed eeremonies, taking to

place on a large field just outside of Villers-en-Haye and making a very impressive sight. The following morning a private from the 804th Pioneer Infantry was exeeuted at Belleville, for rape.

tached

to the

92d Division arose

which took place

at

6 A.M., and

at 5 A.M.

made

The

official

photographer

at-

on the morning of the execution,

moving-pieture film of the hanging of this private. Although the presentation of the Distinguished Servaee Crosses occurred at 3 p.m. on the previous day, the offieial photographer did not see fit to

make

a picture of this

a

and when asked

if

he had made

presentation, he replied that he had forgotten about 1

he campaign against Negro

officers

708

began

in the

a pietur^ of the

it.

cantonments. At

Camp

An

Dix every

Essay Toward a History of the Black

effort

was made

to

Man

in the

keep eompetent eolored

being trained. Most of the Colonels began a eampaign of Negro offieers from the moment of embarkation. At

an attempt was made

first

in the

same

artillery offieers

for

and Negro

from

wholesale removals

have General Headquarters

to

assent to the blanket proposition that white

on

Great War

offieers

in

Franee

would not

get

organization; this was unsueeessful and was followed by the

charge that Negroes were incompetent as

officers.

This charge was made

wholesale and before the colored officers had had a chance to prove themselves, “Efficiency Boards” immediately began wholesale removals and as

such boards could act on the mere opinion of field officers the colored company officers began to be removed wholesale and to be replaced by whites.

court martials of Negro officers were often outrageous in their contravention of common sense and military law. The experience of one Captain

The

will illustrate.

Captaincy the

first

at

He was

man, with militia training, who secured a very difficult accomplishment — and was from

a college

Des Moines — a

regarded as an efficient officer by his fellows;

when he reached

Europe, however, the Major of his battalion was from Georgia, and this Captain was too independent to suit him. The Major suddenly ordered the

Captain under close

arrest

and

after

long delay preferred twenty-three charges

These he afterward reduced to seven, continuing meantime to heap restrictions and insults on the accused, but untried, officer. Instead of breaking arrest or resenting his treatment the Captain kept cool, hired a good

against him.

colored lawyer in his division and put up so strong a fight that the court martial acquitted him and restored him to his command, and sent the Major to the stevedores.

Not every

officer

was able thus

to preserve his

calm and

poise.

colored officer turned and cursed his unfair superiors and the court been martial, and revealed an astonishing story of the way in which he had

One

hounded.

A

Lieutenant of a Machine

Gun

Battalion was

employed

at Intelligence

and Personnel work. He was dismissed and reinstated three times because the white officers who succeeded him could not do the work. Finally he was under arrest for one and one-half months and was dismissed from service, but General Headquarters investigated the case and restored him to his rank. Most of the Negro officers had no chance to fight. Some were naturally incompetent and deserved demotion or removal, but these men were not objects of attack as often as the

more competent and independent men.

Here, however, as so often afterward, the French stepped

in,

quite uncon-

and upset careful plans. Wliile the American officers were conGeneral vinced of the Negro officers’ incompetency and were besieging sciously,

709

War and Peace

Headquarters to remove them en masse, the FYench instructors at the Cmndricourt Training School, where Captains and selected Lieutenants

were sent

reported that the Negroes were

training,

for

Americans sent

among

the best

there.

Moreover, the 93d Division, which had never been assembled or even completed as a unit and stood unrecognized and unattached, was suddenly called in the desperate

French need,

The Americans were thoroughly about

to

be introduced

to

to

be brigaded with French

scared. Negroes

and Negro

soldiers.

officers

were

French democracy without the watchful eye of guard them. Something must be done.

American color hatred to As the Negro troops began moving toward the Vosges sector of the battlefront,

From

August

6,

1918, active anti-Negro propaganda

the General Headquarters of the

American Army

became

at

evident.

Chaumont

the

French Military Mission suddenly sent out, not simply to the French Army, but to all the Prefects and Sous-Prefects of France (corresponding to our governors and mayors), data setting forth at length the American attitude toward Negroes; warning against social recognition; stating that Negroes

were prone eration, etc.

deeds of violence and were threatening America with degenThe white troops backed this propaganda by warnings and tales

to

wherever they preceded the blacks. This misguided effort was lost

on the French. In some cases peasants and villagers were scared at the approach of Negro troops, but this was but temporary and the colored troops everywhere they went soon became easily the best liked of

all

foreign soldiers.

They were

received in the best homes,

and where they could speak French or their hosts understood English, there poured forth their story of injustice and wrong into deeply sympathetic ears.

The impudent swagger contempt ples of

for

of

many

white troops, with their openly expressed Frogs” and their evident failure to understand the first princi-

democracy

in the

most democratic of

lands, finished the

work thus

begun.

No

sounding words of President Wilson can offset in the minds of thousands of Frenchmen the impression of disloyalty and coarseness which the attempt to force color prejudice made on a people who just owed their salvation to hlack West Africa! Liittle

was published or openly

said,

but

when

the circular on

American Negro prejudice was brought to the attention of the French ministry, it was quietly collected and burned. And in a thousand delicate ways the French expressed their silent disapprobation. For instance, in a provincial town a colored officer entered a full dining-room; the smiling landlady

hastened to

seat

him (how

diately

began

natural!) at a table with white to

show

their displeasure.

710

A

American

French

officers,

officer at a

who immeneighboring

An

Man

Essay Toward a History of the Black

in the

Great

War

Not

table with French officers quietly glanced at the astonished landlady.

word was

said,

no one

in the

a

dining-room took any apparent notice, but the

black officer was soon seated with the courteous Frenchmen.

On

the Negroes this double experience of deliberate and devilish per-

secution from their

with a taste of real democracy

own countrymen, coupled

and world-old culture, was revolutionizing. T’hey began to hate prejudice and discrimination as they had never hated it before. They began to realize filling them with a desire to its eternal meaning and complications. Far from escape from their race and country, they were filled with a bitter, dogged determination never to give up the fight

Negro equality

for

in

America.

If

American color prejudice counted on this war experience to break the spirit of the young Negro, it counted without its host. A new, radical Negro spirit has been born in France, which leaves us older radicals far behind. Thou-

men

sands of young black

and they return ready

have offered their

to offer

them again

lives for the Lilies of

for the

France

Sun-flowers of Afro-

America.

THE 93RD DIVISION American Negroes to arrive in France were the Labor comprising all told some 150,000 men. The Negro fighting units were the 92nd and 93rd Divisions.

The

first

The

so-called 93rd Division

was from the

first

Battalions,

a thorn in the flesh of the

Negro National Guard troops almost exclusively units from the officered by Negroes, — the 8th Illinois, the 5th New York, and Massachusetts. The District of Columbia, Maryland, Ohio, Tennessee and division. For a division was thus incomplete and never really functioned as a here, but time it was hoped that Colonel Young might be given his chance Bourbons.

It

consisted of

1

nothing came of

this.

enforcements was

when

Early in April

sorest, these

the need of the French for re-

black troops were hurriedly transported to

France and were soon brigaded with the French armies.

THE

3

6 9

T H

formation This regiment was originally authorized by Governor Sulzer, but its officer. was long prevented. Finally it was organized with but one Negro Eventually the regiment sailed with colored and white Erance, January

1,

officers,

1918, and went into the second battle of the

east of Verdun, near Ville-sur-Turbe.

It

was thus the

711

first

landing in

Marne

m July,

American Negro unit

War and Peace

in battle

and one of the

first

American

units.

Colored

officers took part in this

and some were cited for bravery. Nevertheless the white Colonel, Hayward, after the battle secured the transfer of every single colored officer,

battle

except the bandmaster and chaplain.

The regiment was

in a state of irritation

by the influence of the non-commissioned

because the regiment was

all

from

many

times, but

officers

New York and

it

was restrained

— very strong

in this case

mainly from Harlem

— and

especially because being brigaded with the

French they were from the first treated on such terms of equality and brotherhood that they were eager to fight. There were charges that Colonel Hayward and his white officers needlessly sacrificed the lives of these

men. This, of course,

certainly the casualties in this regiment

the

Champagne,

were heavy and

is

hard to prove; but

in the great attack in

September and October, two hundred were killed and eight hundred were wounded and gassed. The regiment went into battle with the French on the left and the Moroccans on the right and got into its own in

barrage by advancing faster than the other units. half days, In unit.

all, It

when

three to four days

the regiment was under

It

was

and one-

in line seven

usually the limit.

is

fire

191 days

—a

record for any American

received over 170 citations for the Croix de Guerre and Distinguished

Service Cross and was the

November

18, with the

first

unit of the Allied armies to reach the Rhine,

Second French Army.

THE 371ST AND 372ND The

Regiment was drafted from South Carolina and had southern white from the first, many of whom were arrogant and overbearing. The

371st

officers

regiment mobilized France, April

at

Camp

Jackson, October 5-17, and

embarked

for

from Newport News, Va. It was trained at Rembercourt-auxPorts (Meuse) and left for the region near Bar-le-Duc, June 5. The troops 9,

Argonne June 22. They were brigaded with the 157th French Division, 1 3th Army Corps, and remained in the battle-line, front and reserve,

arrived in the

until the Armistice

was signed.

here are few data at present available for the history of this regiment because there were no colored officers to preserve it. It is rumored, however, I

number

that after the

first

officers led to

some mutual understandings. The regiment

battle the

of casualties

among

the meanest of their

received a

number

of citations for bravery.

As

this

regiment was brigaded usually with the 372nd, a part of ib history

follows: I

he

official

records

show

that the

372nd Infantry was organized

712

at

Camp

An

Essay Toward a History of the Black

Stuart, January

1,

Man

Great

in the

War

1918, Colonel Glendie B. Young, Infantry, U.S.N.G.,

commanding, and included

the following National

Guard

units: First

Sepa-

Ninth Battalion of Ohio, Infanand one company each from tr\’; Company L, Sixth Massachusetts, Infantry; Maryland, Tennessee and Connecticut. To these were added later 250 men

rate Battalion, District of Columbia, Infantry;

Camp

from

Custer; excepting the Staff,

Machine Gun, Headquarters and

Supply Companies, the regiment was officered by colored men. The regiment was brigaded with the 371st into the 186th Infantry Brigade, 93rd a unit of the Provisional 93rd Division. It was understood that the Division, which was to be composed of all Negro troops, would be fully

when

organized in France; but

the 372nd arrived at

1918, the organization was placed under later the Its

command of the

w ere commanding.

The regiment

subject to orders of the French G.Q.G., General

all

spent five wrecks in training and re-organization at Conde-

en-Barrois (Meuse), as a unit of the 13th French trained

Army

Corps.

The men w ere

m French methods by French officers and non-commissioned officers

wath French ordnance equipment.

Major exclaimed and

French. Four weeks

brigade was dissolved and the 93rd Division ceased to be mentioned.

four regiments

Petain,

Nazaire, April 14,

St.

alert.

enthusiastically

Their regiment

ning the w orth of our troops

on the

have

wall

w'as

They developed street:

so rapidly that a

“These

men

French

are intelligent

Thus, from the beginveteran of the French Army.

a glorious career.”

recognized by a

under actual war conditions, the regiment w as sent where it spent to a “quiet sector” — sub-sector, Argonne West, on June 8, and how' to hold twent)’ days learning the organization of defensive positions

To complete

its

training

these positions under shell

fire

from the enemy. During

of the 63rd French Division and during the

35th French Division.

On

July 2, the

last

this

ten days

it

time

was

it

was

a part

a part of the

372nd Infantry became permanently

French Division, commanded by General Goybet. The division consisted of two colored American regiments and one French all regiment of infantry. The artillery units, engineers, sanitary train, etc., w ere identified wath the 157th

French.

On

his

first

inspection tour, at Vanquois, General Goybet asked one

he thought the Germans could pass if they started over. The caiPt do a good job in killing all little brown private replied: “Not if the bodies clinched his confidence us.” That pleased the new General very much and of our

men

if

of

in the black troops.

position near the village of July 13 the regiment retired to a reserve blow’. Locheres (Meuse), for temporary rest and to help sustain the coming

On

The

next day Golonel

Tupes, a regular army

and prepared

Young was officer. In

for action,

but

it

relieved of

command

by Golonel Herschel

the afternoon the regiment was assembled

later

was found that

713

it

wnuld not be needed.

War and Peace

The

attack of the

Germans was launched near Rheims on

the night of July 14

and the next evening the world read of the decisive defeat of the Germans by General Gouraud’s army.

The

following

Sunday found the regiment

Perche, not every

far

billeted in the

from Verdun. After a band concert

Golonel Tup es introduced himself

town of Sivry-lain the afternoon

command. In the course of his remarks, he said that he had always commanded regulars, but he had little doubt that the 372nd Infantry could become as good as any regiment in to his

France.

On

26 the regiment occupied sub-sector 304. The occupation of this sub-sector was marked by hard work and discontentment. The whole position

had

July

to

be re-organized, and

The

reputation for good work.

regiment took part

in

in

two

doing

this the

men

maintained their previous

total stay in the sector

and

raids

was seven weeks. The

several individuals distinguished

them-

one man received a Croix de Guerre because he held his trench mortar between his legs to continue firing when the base had been damaged by a shell; another carried a wounded French comrade from “No Man’s Land” under heavy fire, and was also decorated. Several days after a raid, the Germans were retaliating by shelling the demolished village of Montzeville, selves:

below the Post-of-Gommand and occupied by some of. Private Rufus Pinckney rushed through the heavy fire and

situated in the valley

the reserves;

rescued a

On

wounded French

soldier.

another occasion. Private Kenneth Lewis of the Medical Detachment,

later killed at his post, displayed

danger by sticking

to

such fine qualities of coolness and disdain

for

duty until the end that two post-mortem decorations: the

Croix de Guerre with Palm and Medaille Militaire were awarded. a very distinguished recognition in the

The

latter

is

French Army.

So well had the regiment worked in the Argonne that it was sent to relieve the 123rd French Infantry Regiment in the sub-sector Vanquois, on July 28.

An

Germans in the valley of the Aire, of which Vanquois was a key, was expected at any moment. New defenses were to be constructed and old ones strengthened. The men applied themselves with a courageous devoattack by the

tion, night

and

under

Vanquois became

fire,

day, to their tasks a

and

after

two weeks of watchful working

formidable defensive system.

Besides the gallantry of Private Pinckney, Montzeville must be

bered

in

connection with the removal of colored

was there that

a

board of officers

appointed by Golonel Tupes,

charged with inefficiency. later killed in action.

(all

remem-

from the regiment. It white) requested by Golonel Young and officers

on the cases of twenty-one colored officers Only one out of that number was acquitted: he was

The

sat

charges of inefficiency were based on physical

disability, insufficient training, unsuitability.

714

The

other colored officers

who

An Essay Toward

a History of the Black

Man

in the

Great

War

to other units or sent to

had been removed were either transferred

re-

classification depots.

The Colonel

Commanding Ceneral through an interpreter: “The regiment know as much about their duties as a child.”

told the

colored officers in this

The Ceneral was

surprised

Colonel himself was not so caused the Colonel

and whispered to another French officer that the brilliant and that he believed it was prejudice that

make such

to

a

A few moments after, the Colonel

change.

Ceneral that he had requested that no more colored officers be sent to the regiment. In reply to this the Ceneral explained how unwise it was because the colored officers had been trained along with their men at a great expenditure of time and money by the American and French governments;

told the

and, also, he doubted

other American units. great

autumn

drive

The General

and that

it

insisted that the time

would be

was

at

hindrance because he feared the

a

not be pleased with the change.

men would

him from hand for the

white officers could be spared

if well-qualified

The Colonel heeded

not his

General and forwarded two requests for an anti-colored-officer regiment. He went so far as to tell the Lieutenant-Colonel that he believed the regiment

men

should have white

would not have stood Adjutant to never

for

non-commissioned

for this at

trust a

any

The Colonel

price.

“damned black

officers.

clerk”

and

that

Of course, often

the

would

men

tell

the

he considered one

man

worth a million Negroes.” About September 8 the regiment was relieved by the 129th United States after Infantry and was sent to the rear for period of rest. Twenty-four hours

white

were received to proceed farther. The nightly marches began. The regiment marched from place to place in the Aube, the Marne and the Haute Marne until it went into the great Champagne battle on

arrival in the rest area, orders

September

27.

For nine days

it

helped push the

days were hard, but these Fortunately,

all

men

Hun

frontier.

Those

came out with

glory.

toward the Belgian

did their duty and

the colored officers had not

left

the regiment and

it

was they

and the brave sergeants who led the men to victory and fame. I he new white regiment went into officers had just arrived, some of them the night before the capacity, having just battle, several of whom had never been under fire in any come out of the training school at Langres. Nevertheless, the regiment was cited by the

French and the regimental colors were decorated by Vice-

Admiral Moreau

at Brest,

After the relief

on the

January 24, 1919. battlefield, the

regiment reached

Somme

Bionne

from everywhere except Amerisent to a can Headquarters. After a brief rest of three days the regiment was Colonel finally quiet sector in the Vosges, on the frontier of Alsace. The remaining colored officers, except the two dentists and the two

(Marne) October

8.

Congratulations

came

disposed of the

715

in

War and Peace

chaplains. All the officers were instructed to carry their arms at virtually to shoot

eorporal of

any soldier on the

Company L was

least provoeation.

As

all

times and

consequence, a

a

shot and killed by First Lieutenant James B.

Coggins, from North Carolina, for a reason that no one has ever been able to explain.

The

signing of the Armistice and the cessation of hostilities, perhaps,

prevented a general, armed opposition to a system of prejudice encouraged by the

Commanding

Officer of the Regiment.

Despite the prejudice of officers toward the men, the regiment marched

from Ban-de-Laveline

to

Cranges of Vologne,

a distance of forty-five kilome-

one day and maintained such remarkable discipline that the officers themselves were compelled to accord them praise. While stationed at Cranges, individuals in the regiment were decorated on ters, in

December

1

7 for various deeds of gallantry in the

Champagne

battle.

General

Goybet presented four military medals and seventy-two Croix de Guerre to enlisted men. Colonel Tupes presented four Distinguished Service Crosses to enlisted men. At the time, the regiment had just been returned to the American command, the following order was read:

157th Division

Hqrs.

December

15th, 1918.

Staff.

General Order No. 246. \

On

December, 1918, the 371st and the 372nd R. I., have been returned to the disposal of the American Command. It is

the date of the 12th of

U. S.

not without profound emotion that

(French) Division and in

I

come

my personal name,

in the

to say

name

good-bye

of the 157th to

our valiant

comrades of combat. »

For seven months

we have

lived as brothers of arms, sharing the

same

same hardships, the same dangers; side by side we have taken the great battle of the Champagne, that a wonderful victory has

works, the part in

ended.

The

157th (french) Division will never forget the wonderful impetus irresistible, the rush heroic of the colored American regiments on the “Observatories Crest” and in the Plain of Menthois. defense, the nests of

machine guns, the

The most

formidable

best organized positions, the

most crushing, could not stop them. These best regiments have gone through all with disdain of death and thanks to their courage

artillery barrages

devotedness, the “Red

been ahead

Hand” Division has during nine hard days of battle ^

advance of the Fourth (French) Army. Officers and non-commissioned officers and privates of the 371st and in the victorious

716

An

Essay Toward a History of the Black

Infantry, U.S.,

372nd Regiments and

bow down

I

Man

Great

in the

War

respectfully salute your glorious dead

I

before your standards, which by the side of the 333rd R.

1.,

led us to victory.

Dear Friends from America, when you have crossed back over the ocean, don’t forget the “Red Hand” Division. Our fraternity of arms has been soaked in the blood of the brave. Those bonds will be indestructible. Keep a faithful remembrance to your General, so proud to have com-

remember

you, and

manded

that his thankful affection

is

gained

to

you

forever.

(Signed) General Goybet,

Gommanding

the 157th (French)

Division, Infantry.

achievements and expressed his

men

them on

in addressing the regiment, congratulated

Colonel Tupes,

to take a just pride in their

He

satisfaction with their conduct.

accomplishments and

asked the

their spirit of loyalty.

Can this be surpassed for eccentricity? The seven weeks at Granges were pleasant and profitable socially. were given

and the

to the

men

by French

civilian population

opened

the

Lectures

outdoor recreation was provided

officers,

their hearts

and

their

homes

Negro

to the

prevent the heroes. Like previous attempts, the efforts of the white officers to mingling of Negroes with the French girls of the village were futile. Every

man

was taken on

his merits.

The mayor

of Granges gave the regiment an

enthusiastic farewell.

On

January

eomplymg process

it

1,

with the red-tape preparatory to

went

to Brest, arriving there

THE Up

Le Mans (Sarthe). After embarkation and the delousmg

1919, the regiment entrained for

to this point the anti-Negro

January 13, 1919.

3

7 0

TH

propaganda

is

clear

and

fairly

consistent

and

in unopposed. General Headquarters had not only witnessed instructions Negro prejudice to the French, but had, also, consented to wholesale reof movals of officers among the engineers and infantry, on the main ground

color.

Even the French,

in at least

one

case,

had been persuaded

that

Negro

cause of certain inefficiencies in Negro units. Undoubtedly the cruel losses of the 369th Regiment were due in part to the

officers w'ere the

assumption of the Freneh

at first that the

American Negroes were

like the

given them be Senegalese; these half-civilized troops could not in the time

717

War and Peace

modern machine warfare, and they were rushed at the enemy almost with naked hands. The resulting slaughter was horrible. Our troops tell of great black fields of stark and crimson dead after some of these superhuman trained in

onrushes. It

was

at first

men

kind of fighting that the French expected of the black Americans

and some white American

got the glory.

assumed ally

this

Negro

that the

suggested to

The French officers

them by

was another

officers did not greatly care so

long as white

easily

misunderstood the situation

were

to

blame, especially

as this

at first

and

was continu-

the Americans.

however,

when

Regiment came. T his was the famous 8th Illinois, and it had a full quota of Negro officers, from Colonel down. It had seen ser\'ice on the Mexican border; it went to Houston, Tex., after the Thirteen had died for Freedom; and it was treated with wholesome respect, it was sent to Newport News, Va., for embarkation; once Colonel Dennison refused to embark his troops and luarched them back to camp because he learned they were to be “Jim-Crowed” on the way over. It

The regiment

story',

the 370th

arrived at Brest, April 22,

and was assigned

to the

72nd

French Division, remaining near Belfort until June 17. Then it went with the 34th French Division into the front-line, at St. Mihiel, for a month and later with the 36th French Division into the Argonne, where they fought. They were given a short period of rest and then they went into the front-line, at Soissons, with the 59th

French Division. In September and October they

were fighting again.

On

September

15, in the Vauxaillion area, they

captured Mt. Dessinges

and the adjacent woods after severe fighting. They held a sector alone afterward on the Canal L’Oise et Aisne and when attacked, repulsed the Cermans and moved forward, gaining the praise of the French Ceneral. On October 24, the regiment went into the front-line again, near Crand Lup, and performed excellent service; the Armistice found part of the regiment across the Belgian frontier.

he general conduct of the regiment was excellent. No case of rape was reported and only one murder. 4 he regiment received sixteen Distinguished Service Crosses and seventy-five Croix de Guerre, beside company citations. I

When

at first the

regiment did not adopt the

tactics of

“shock” troops, the

white Americans again took their cue and inspired a speech from the F’rench Ceneral, which the colored men could not understand. It was not long,

however, before the French CTcneral publicly apologized

and hasty and men for

for his first

and afterward he repeatedly commended both officers their bravery, intelligence and daring. This regiment received more citations than any other American regiment for bravery on the field of battle. There criticism

was, of course, the

fly in

the ointment,

— the effort to substitute white officers

718

An Essay Toward

a History’ of the Black

Man

in the

Great

War

was strong and continuous, notwithstanding the fact that many of the black officers of this regiment were among the most effieient in tlie Ameriean Army. General Headquarters by this time had begun to ehange its attitude and curb the Bourbons.

Army

to

It

announced

that

it

was not the policy of the Ameriean

make wholesale removals simply on account

of color and

it

allowed

the citations for bravery of Negro troops to be approved. Nevertheless, the pressure continued. First the eolored Colonel, the ranking Negro officer in Franee, was sent

home. The reason

for this

is

not elear. At

Colonel Dennison was replaced by a white Colonel, who afterward accepted a Croix de Guerre for an exploit which the Negro offieers to a man deelare was actually performed by a Negro officer while he was sitting snugly out; Blue in his tent. The men of the regiment openly jeered him, crying

any

rate

our Colonel; Duncan’s our Colonel!” referring to the eolored Lieutenant-Colonel. But the white Colonel was diplomatic; he let the eolored

Eyes

ain’t

officers

run the regiment, posed

as the

open amusement of the Negroes) and

“Moses” of the colored race

(to

the

quietly tried to induct white officers.

white Lieutenant,” he said plainhad in his pocket tively to a eolored officer. The offieer at that moment Headquarters for white a copy of the Colonel’s telegram asking General suceeeded in getting but officers. But the Armistice came before the Colonel his brother as Major (without a battalion) and one Lieuwhite officers,

“I

eannot understand why they sent

this



tw'o

tenant.

The fore, a

America in distinction remained, therethe white Colonel was only commanding

organization that ranked

Negro organization,

and Dennison was

still

for

titular

all

head.

THE 92ND DIVISION So much

for the

93rd Division.

Its

troops fought magnificently in the

Cham-

praise by the pagne, the Argonne and elsewhere and were given unstinted well, too, Erench and even commendation by the Americans. They fought of their officers— 371st Regiment under white, the 369th

despite the color

Regiment and 372nd Regiments under white and colored, and the 370th made the under colored were equally brave, except that the 370th Regiment most conspicuous record. One might conclude under ordinary circumstances that effieiency in officers

and not of race,

it

was

a matter of

but, unfortunately, the efficient colored

and m had almost no chance even to try except in the 370th Regiment With a fair chance there is the Champagne battle with the 372nd Regiment. just as well as the no doubt that he could have led every one of these regiments

officer

719

War and

white

officers. It

must, too, be

officers in all these

Peace

remembered

that all the

non-commissioned

regiments were Negroes.

he storm center of the Negro troops was the 92nd Division. The brigading of the 93rd Division with the French made wholesale attack and depreciation I

was continually annulled by the generous appreciation of the French. The 92nd Division, however, was planned as a complete Negro division, manned by Negro company officers. Everything depended, then, on difficult,

since

it

the General and field officers as to

From

the very

first

there was

Instead of putting Colonel

Young

how

fair this

experiment should be.

open and covert opposition and at the

trouble.

head, the white General Ballou was

chosen and surrounded by southern white

officers

who

despised ^Tigger”

officers.

General Ballou himself was well-meaning, but weak, vacillating, without great ability and afraid of southern criticism. He was morbidly impressed by the horror of this “experimenG and proceeded from the first to kill the morale of his troops by orders and speeches. He sought to make his Negro officers feel

personal responsibility for the Houston outbreak; he tried to accuse them* indirectly of German propaganda; he virtually ordered them to submit to certain personal humiliations

and discriminations without protest. Thus, before the 92nd Division was fully formed. General Ballou had spread hatred and distrust among his officers and men. “That old Ballou stuff!” became a byword in the division for anti-Negro propaganda. Ballou was finally dismissed from

his

command

The main

for “tactical inefficiency.”

however, lay in a curious misapprehension in white men of the meaning and method of race contact in America. They sought desperately to reproduce in the Negro division and in France the racial difficulty,

restrictions of America,

blacks.

Negro

on the theory

that

But they did not understand the

any new freedom would

fact that

men

of the types

“spoil ” the

who became

officers protect

themselves from continuous insult and discrimination by making and moving in a world of their own; they associate socially where they are more than welcome; they live for the most part beside neighbors

who

them; they attend schools where they are not insulted; and they work where their work is appreciated. Of course, every once in a while they have like

to

upon their world — new discriminations occasional and not continuous.

unite to resent encroachments

in

law

and custom; but this is he world which General Ballou and his field officers tried to re-create for Negro officers was a world of continuous daily insult and discrimination to an extent that none had ever experienced, and they did this in a country where I

the discrimination was artificial and entirely unnecessary, arousing the liveliest

astonishment and mystification.

For instance,

when

the Headquarters

720

Gompany of the 92nd

Division sailed

An

Essay Toward a History’ of the Black

for Brest, elaborate quarters in the best hotel

Man

in the

Great

were reserved

for

War

white

officers,

and unfinished barracks, without beds and in the cold and mud, were assigned Negro officers. The colored officers went to their quarters and then returned to the city. They found that the white Americans, unable to make themselves understood in French, had not been given their reservation, but had gone to another and poorer hotel. The black officers immediately explained and took the fine reservations. As no Negroes had been trained in artillery, it was claimed immediately to qualify. that none were competent. Nevertheless, some were finally found Then it was claimed that technically trained privates were impossible to

There were plenty to be had if they could be gathered from the various camps. Permission to do this was long refused, but after endless other delays

find.

and

troubles, the Field Artillery finally

officers.

Before the

Upton, between

came

into being with a few colored

was ready, the division mobilized at Camp 28 and June 4, and was embarked by the tenth of June

artillery

May

for France.

92nd Division arrived at Brest by June 20. A week later the whole division went to Bourbonne-les-Bains, where it stayed in training until August 6. Here a determined effort at wholesale replacement of the colored

The

entire

white Lieutenants were sent to the camp to replace “Efficiency” boards began to weed out colored men.

officers took place. Fifty

Negro officers. Without doubt there was among colored as among white American officers much inefficiency, due to lack of adaptability, training and the hurry of the race question preparation. But in the case of the Negro officers repeatedly came to the fore and permission was asked to remove them because they were against their race colored, while the inefficiency charge was a wholesale one and nature.” General Headquarters by

this time,

however, had settled down

to a policy

and while this of requiring individual, rather than wholesale, accusation, position long if his difference, yet in the army no officer can hold his

made

a

then, superiors for any reason wash to get rid of him. While, w^aiting white Lieutenants atically

reduced

in

went

aw^ay, the

many

of the

colored officers began to be system-

number.

Vosges August 6 the division entered the front-line trenches in the quiet sector, w'ith only an sector and stayed here until September 20. It w^as a German raid to repel. About September 20, the division began to

On

occasional

Argonne, where the great American drive to cut off the Germans front-lines, as was to take place. The colored troops were not to enter the unequipped for General Pershing himself afterward said, as they were entirely wTich arrived in the front-line service. Nevertheless, the 368th Regiment, was suddenly sent into battle on the front-line on the

move

to the

Argonne September

24,

721

War and Peace

morning of September 26. As this is Negro officers and troops, it deserves

recital in detail.

the story of the failure of white field officers to do their duty and the

It is

partially successful

do

a typical instance of the difficulties of

and long-continued

their duty despite this.

among

the colored officers

effort

of company officers and

to

That there was inexperience and incompetency is

probable, but

it

was not confined

their case the greater responsibility lay elsewhere, for

the field officers: First, to see that their to

men

have the plans clearly explained,

men

it

by

in

was the plain duty of

were equipped

at least, step

them;

to

for battle;

second,

company

step, to the

maintain liaison between battalions and between the ment and the French and other American units.

officers; third, to

regi-

Here follows the story as it was told to me point by point by those who were actually on the spot. They were earnest, able men, mostly Lieutenants and Captains, and one could not doubt, there in the dim, smoke-filled tents about Le Mans, their absolute conscientiousness and frankness.

THE

3

6 8

TH

The

368th Regiment went into the Argonne September 24 and was put into the drive on the morning of September 26. Its duty was “combat liaison," with

the French 37th Division and the 77th (white) Division of Americans.

regiment artillery

as a

whole was not equipped

support until the sixth day of the battle;

trombones, or signal

fires,

for battle in the front-line.

shears for

German

useless with the

it

had no

had no grenades, no trench

no airplane panels

flares,

It

The

and no

for signaling

The wire-cutting shears given them were absolutely heavy German barbed wire and they were able to borrow only wire.

which had to serve the whole attacking battalion.’^ they had no maps and were at no time given definite objectives.

sixteen large shears, Finally,

On

advancing from the French trenches the morning of the twenty-sixth

by organizations and owing

to the fact that

none had

much

wire was

met with

wirecutters, considerable disorganization

resulted in the companies, especially in the matter of liaison.”

As

it

withdraw

was almost dark until

1

time and having no liaison with any of the other units, could get in touch with the Commanding Officer, 368th Infantry.

searched along the

at this

I

decided

to

The enemy

with their artillery during our withdrawal, but none of the shells fell near us; was pitch dark by this time and we had juSt reached the German’s first trench. There was trails

it

much

confusion owing

to the

mass of wire we had

to

contend with

in the

dark before the companies reached

the French trenches.”

“Company

G spent the entire day of the twenty-sixth

ments. Great difficulty was experienced in

this

working

its

way through the wire entangle-

work because of the lack of wirecutters.”

— Reports of Major M. A.

Ill

Elser.

An Essay Toward

The Second

a History of the Black

in the

Regiment entered

Battalion of the 368th

ing of September 26, with Major Elser in

were colored;

Man

Company F went “over the

command;

all

Great

War

battle

the

top” at 5:30 A.M.;

on the morn-

company officers

Company H, with

which the Major was, went “over” at 12:30 noon; advancing four kilometers the battalion met the enemy’s fire; the Machine Cun Company silenced the fire; Major Elser, who had halted in the woods to collect souvenirs from dead bodies, immediately withdrew part of the battalion to the rear in

Cerman single

about dark without notifying the

file

Dabney and Lieutenant Powell the

men

of the

of the battalion. Captain

rest

Machine Cun Company

out in order about 10:00 P.M.

When

led the rest of

the broadside opened on

Major Elser stood wringing his hands and crying: “What shall I do! What shall I do!” At night he deplored the occurrence, said it was all his fault, and the next morning Major Elser commended the Machine Cun September

Company

26,

for extricating the deserted part of the battalion.

Moving forward

companies went “over the top” at 4 P.M. without liaison. With the rest of the battalion again, these companies went forward one and one-half kilometers. Major Elser stayed back with the Post-of-Command. again at

1 1

A.M., tw^o

and darkness again stopped the advancing companies and Captain Jones fell back 500 metres and sent a message about 6 A.M. on the morning of September 28 to the Major asking for re-enforcements. Captain Jones stayed under snipers’ fire until about 3 P.M. and when no answer to his request came from the Major, he went “over the top again and retraced the

Enemy

fire

same 500 metres. Heavy machine gun and

men

took refuge in nearby trenches, but his All this

time the Major was in the

Elser was relieved of the

command

rear.

On

rifle fire

began

again greeted him.

to drift

September

away

He

in confusion.

28, however.

Major

of the battalion and entered the hospital

for “psychoneurosis,” or “shell-shock,”

— a phrase which often covers a multi-

tude of sins. Later he was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel and transferred to

Labor Battalion. Meantime, on September 27, at 4:30 P. M., the Third Battalion of the 368th white Infantry' moved forward. It was commanded by Major B. F. Norris, a New York lawyer, a graduate of Plattsburg, and until this battle a Headquarters

a

Three companies of the battalion advanced two and one-half kilometres and about 6:30 P.M. were fired on by enemy machine guns. The Major, who was in support with one company and Captain with no experience on the

line.

machine guns to trenches seventy-five The Major’s orders were confusing and the company as well

a platoon of machine guns, ordered the

yards in the rear.

as the platoon retreated to the trenches, leaving the firing-line

Subjected to heavy

artillery,

grenade, machine gun and

whole night of September 27 and being without

723

artillery

unsupported.

rifle fire

during the

support or grenades.

War and Peace

the firing line broke

where

men

took refuge in the trench with the Major,

spent a terrible night under rain and bombardment. Next morning,

all

September ordered.

and the

28, at 7:30 A.M., the firing-line was restored

The men

led by their colored officers responded.

and an advance

They swept forward

two and one-half kilometres and advanced beyond both French and Americans on the left and right. Their field officers failed to keep liaison with the

French and American white units and even Battalion,

which was dribbling away

in

ing firing-line of the Third Battalion

machine guns,

seventy-sevens,

too far in advance received the

endured

The

five hours.

severely.

They

etc. It still

German

They were ordered

to re-form

halt, to hold, to

Finally, at 6:30 P.M., they

three kilometres

their

on

men and

flank

fire front,

and the

and

and

and take up

and

retreated to the

their lack of

positions,

they

this

the colored officers

equipment,

which they had asked. which they did. Many

Company Commanders

during the day: to

withdraw, to leave woods as quickly as possible.

were definitely ordered

to

advance.

and met exactly the same conditions

all sides.

rear

men

He reprimanded fire

support and being

artillery

their lack of maps for

contradictory orders passed to the

artillery fire

had no

reported the intense artillery

and

of their

a withering fire of trench mortars,

line broke at 12:30

their ignorance of objectives

advance, to

one of the

met

support trench, where the Major was.

own Second front trenches. The advanc-

lost track

They advanced

as before,

The Company Commanders were unable

the Colonel ordered the

the line. Utter confusion resulted,

Major

— there

to

withdraw

to

— heav)^ hold

his battalion

were many casualties and

all

from

many

were gassed. Major Norris withdrew, leaving a platoon under Lieutenant Dent on the line ignorant of the command to withdraw. They escaped finally unaided during the night.

The Chief of Staff said in his letter to Senator AIcKellar: “One of our majors commanding a battalion said: ‘The men are rank cowards, there is no other words for

” it.’

A

colored officer writes:

“I

was the only colored person present when

this

was uttered:

It

was on the

27th of last September in the second line trenches of Vienne Le Chateau in

our attack

Argonne and was uttered by Major B. F. Norris, commanding the 3rd Battalion. Major Norris, himself, was probably the biggest coward in the

because he

left his

Colonels dugout

Battalion out in the front lines and

a nervous wreck.

came back

to the

bunk alongside of the wall and this major came and laid down beside me and he moaned and groaned so' terribly all night that I couldn’t hardly close my eyes — he jumped and twisted worse than anything

and

I

I

have ever seen

was there

in

in a

my life. He was a rank coward himself

on some trifling pretext and remained back all night.” From September 26-29 the First Battalion of the 368th Infantry under left his

unit

724

An

Major

J.

Essay Toward a History of the Black

N. Merrill, was

September 28 shell-fire for

hours

t\\^o

it

in the

Great

French trenches.

in the front-line

prepared to advance, but

it

Man

was ordered back

after

War

On

the night of

being kept standing under

to the trenches.

A patrol

was sent

out to locate the Third Battalion, but being refused maps by the Colonel it was a long time on the quest and before it returned the First Battalion was

ordered to advance, on the morning of September 29. By 1:00 P.M. they had

advanced one mile when they were halted to find Major Merrill. Finally Major Merrill was located after two hours’ search. A French Lieutenant guided them to positions in an old German trench. The Major ordered them forward 600 yards to other deserted

German

trenches. Terrific shell-fire

met

and there were many casualties. They stayed in the trench during the night of September 29 and at noon on September 30 were ordered to advance. They advanced three kilometres through the woods, through shell and machine gun fire and artillery barrage. They dug in and stayed all night

them

here,

under

fire.

On October

Unfortunately,

it

fell

1

the French Artillery

short

came up and put over a

barrage.

and the battalion was caught between the German

and French barrages and compelled hastily to withdraw. The regiment was soon after relieved by a French unit and taken by train to the Marbache sector. Major Elser, of the Second Battalion, made no charges against his colored officers and verbally assumed responsibility for the failure of his battalion. There was for a time strong talk of a court martial for him. Major Merrill made no charges; but Major Norris on account of the two

breaks in the line of the Third Battalion on September 28 ordered five of his colored line officers court-martialed for cowardice and abandonment of

— a Gaptain, two First Lieutenants, and a Second Lieutenant were accused. Only one case, — that of the Second Lieutenant, had been decided positions

at this writing.

He was found

guilty

by the court-martial, but on review of his

case by General Headquarters he was acquitted and restored to his

command.

December

6, writes as

Golonel Greer follows:

there

“From

in the letter to

we went

there

on September

French Gorps. They

26,

Senator McKellar on

to the

Argonne and

had one regiment

in the offensive starting

in the line, attached to the 38th

failed there in all their missions, laid

down and sneaked

were withdrawn.” This is what Golonel Durand, the French General who was in this action, said in a French General Order: "UHonneur de

to the rear, until they

in

command la prise

de

au 368th R. /. U. S.’ And this is what Golonel Greer himself issued in General Order No. 38, Headquarters 92nd Division, the same day he wrote his infamous letter to this

Binarville doit revenir

senator:

“The Division Gommander

commend in order the merBoykin, Gompany G, 326th Eield

desires to

conduct of Private Gharles E. the 368th Signal Battalion. On the afternoon of September 26, 1918, while

itorious

725

War and Peace

Argonne forest the Regimental Commander P. C. and came upon a number of Germans who

Infantry was in action in the

moved forward fled to the

to establish a

woods which were

GUNS. The Commanding the

hill,

Officer ordered the

woods searched

and

set

and Private Boykin,

out with the

rest

to the top of

W. Carpenter)

the officer in charge of scouting (2nd Lieutenant C.

called for volunteers services

FOUND TO BE ALIVE WITH MACHINE a telephone linesman, offered his

of the detail. Wliile trying to flank an

enemy

machine gun another opened fire killing him instantly.” This effort of the 368th Regiment was seized upon by Army gossip and widely heralded as a “failure” of Negro troops, and particularly of Negro officers. Yet the same sort of troops and many Negro officers in the Champagne and afterward in the Argonne under French leadership covered them selves with

glory.

American field had to learn by

The

strategy

real

failure

which was

bitter experience.

in

the

totally

It is

initial

unequal

Argonne

to

German methods and

worse than unfair

experience to the discredit of Negro troops and

drive was in

company

to write off the first officers

who

did

all

was humanly possible under the circumstances.

that

OTHER UNITS The 365th, 366th and 367th Regiments did not enter the battle-line at all in the Argonne. The whole division after the withdrawal of the 368th Regiment was, beginning with September 29, transferred to the to the great drive

civilian

on

that fortress

which was begun,

Metz sector, preparatory rather needlessly, as the

would judge, on the day before the signing of the Armistice, Novem-

ber 10.

According

to plan, the 56th

white American Division was on the

left,

92nd Division was in the center and the French Army was on the The 367th Regiment led the advance and forged ahead of the flanking the entire First Battalion being awarded the Croix de Guerre;

wise field direction held

them back, and

by their own Negro Field

Artillery.

92nd Division had the usual other I

for the first

went

to the Vosges,

It

where

was it

in

was

made one

13-August

18,

men

were cited

for bravery.

it

— hut this time

time they were supported

at

to Division

Camp

France

at

split into

Sherman.

Headquarters, was It

had ten colored

Bourbonne-les-Bains and then

detachments and attached

regiments under the Chief Signal Officer. While July

units,

units.

composed of four companies organized officers.

right.

Beside the four Infantry Regiments the

he 325th field Signal Battalion, attached

and twenty white

the

at

school at Condricourt,

of the best records of any unit.

726

to

Many

of

its

An

Essay Toward a History’ of the Black

Man

Great

in the

War

167th Field Artillery Brigade consisted of hvo regiments of Light

The

Artillery (75s) trained at

Camp Dix (the

349th and

3 50th)

and one regiment of

Camp

Meade, which used 155 howitzers. They experienced extraordinary difficulties in training. Hiere can be no doubt but that deliberate effort was made to send up for examination in

Heavy

Artiller)’ (the 351st)

artillery

not the best, but the poorest equipped candidates. Difficulty was

encountered

in getting colored

transferred to the

been

trained at

men

artiller)^ service. If

with the requisite technical training

the

as prejudiced as in the case of the

Commanding Officer in

this case

had

engineer and other units, there would

But Colonel Moore, although a Southerner, insisted on being fair to his men. The brigade landed in Brest June 26 and was trained at Montmorillon (Vienne). They were favorites in the town and were

have been no Negro

Artilleiy^

received into the social

colored

life

on terms of perfect

company officers and

equality.

eight medical officers.

The

There were

officers

five

were sent

to

school at La Cortine and the Colonel in charge of this French school aid that the work of the colored artiller}^ brigade was better at the end of tw o wrecks

than that of any other American unit that had attended the school. The brigade w^ent into battle in the Metz drive and did its w^ork without a hitch, despite the fact that

it

had no transport

facilities for their

guns and had

to

handle them largely by hand.

The ters,

317th Ammunition Train, wTich

but was under the

artillery in battle,

w^as

attached to Division Headquar-

was organized

at

Camp

Funston

in

December, and had 1,333 officers and men, divided into two battalions, one motor and one horse, with seven companies. There were thirty-three colored and three white officers. The battalion landed in France June 27 and went to La Cortine, with the 167th Field Artillery. It arrived at Marbache October 18 and took part in the Metz drive. It had charge, also, of the Corps Ammunition dumps. During the drive all the officers w^ere colored and Major Dean was in command. Ceneral Sherbourne, one of the few^ Commanding Officers fair to Negro Montmorillon, and

troops, w^armly

to the Artillery

Training School

at

commended the w'ork of the artillery. No general

court martial

took place in the organization from the beginning and no efficiency boards w ere promoted; four sat. This was one of the very few units in which Negroes

being

made

and one

Captains, three First Lieutenants, eleven Second Lieutenants,

a Major.

Near the close of the war thirty-five Lieutenants commissioned at Camp hey were Taylor arrived in Prance and were sent to school near Nantes. subjected to many indignities by the American officers and were compelled 1

leaves to town; to enter the class-room after the whites; they w'ere refused of the cit\', w ho vs ere anxious to reprimanded for conv^ersing wdth the

women

be kind and sympathetic

to the obviously

727

oppressed strangers. Notwithstand-

War and Peace

ing

all this

the

men made good

records and joined their

command

after the

Armistice.

The

317th Engineers were assembled

at

Camp Sherman

with 1,350 officers and men. There were two battalions and

were colored, except four

were from the

field officers.

determined

first

The Commanding

to get rid of the

in all

December the officers

Officers, however,

Negroes.

On May

10 the

colored Captains were relieved, and sent to the 365th and 366th Regiments.

The regiment came Bains until July 20.

to

France

in

June and was trained near Bourbonne-les-

On

July 22

all

the remaining colored officers, except two

Lieutenants, the chaplain and the medical officers, were relieved at the

repeated requests of Colonel Brown, of Ceorgia, and others.

went

Vosges in August, and then

to the

to the

Argonne, doing excellent

technical work in building and construction. All but one

attached to the Fourth French

Army Corps

until

The regiment

December

company were 22; only

Com-

pany E remained with the 92nd Division.

The It

366th Field Hospital was a colored unit with only two or three whites.

handled 10,000 cases before and during the Metz

drive, four weeks,

and was

American Expeditionary Force. Lieutenant Wright, the colored physician in charge, was promoted to a Captaincy. The final engagement immediately preceding the signing of the Armistice was fought in the Marbache sector, south of Metz, and was the most important event in which all the units of the 92nd Division actively participated. rated best in the

The division village of

entered this sector October 7 and established headquarters in the

Marbache, October

10, 1918.

The

in the front lines of the Division sector, with

the rear. Almost immediately

several regiments

were stationed

supporting units and reserves in

upon entering this

were

sector active operations

begun; patrols and reconnoitering parties were sent out from our lines; raiding parties were active and both sides found it necessary to be constantly on the alert.

As the time

for the

advance of the whole Second Army grew nearer

heavy shelling became more frequent, patrolling more active and raiding parties bolder. It was necessary to obtain all possible information regarding the

enemy’s movements and intentions before the advance began. There were many thrilling experiences in the sector during the four weeks preceding the final struggle.

On

the tenth day of November

came

the order

announcing the great

drive

and outlining the position of the 92nd Division in the line. At 7 A. M. on the eleventh, the artillery broke loose with a terrific bombardment; this preparation lasted for a period of 42 minutes and was delivered upon the village of Bois Frehaut and the neighboring woods through which the infantry was to pass in its advance. In the meantime, the boys in the several companies composing the

first

assault line sprang

728

from

their trenches

and

An Essay Toward

a History of the Black

Man

German

The in

first

War

“No Man’s Land” and

with grim determination pushed themselves into the woods in the direction of the great

Great

in the

fortification, the city of

into

Metz.

objective of the 365th Infantry was Bois PVehant (woods) three miles

depth and

tw^o miles in width.

Barbed wire entanglements were everywhere

and German machine guns were sputtering and forth their

messengers of death in

Gompany,

the

37-M

M

all

directions.

Platoon and our

cannon were sending The 365th Machine Gun

large

artillery

and infantrymen repulsed

murderous attack and after tw'o hours of desperate fighting Bois Frehaut was taken by the 365th and held by the Second Battalion of that organization until the bugle sounded the call to cease firing at 1 1 o’clock on the following this

morning.

Gompany H under the command of Gaptain William W. Green with a detachment of Gompany A commanded by Lieutenant Gus Mathews of Ghicago with Gompany G and two other units in The

attack was led by

support. In fighting through the dense woods,

made more

difficult

by large

volumes of smoke from bursting shells, the attacking line in Gompany H became thinned and before many of the men arrived after the Gompany merged from the woods a flanking movement was attempted by the German machine gunners, but the timely arrival of Gompany G under the command

Gompany H from Machine Gun Gompany of the

added danger.

of Lieutenant Walter Lyons saved

this

During

365th was active in

this attack the

covering the advancing infantry and kept the it

impossible for

them

to deliver

an effective

enemy on

fire

the run, thus

against the

men

making

in the assault

The second assault waive was under the command of Gaptain Walter of the R. Sanders who was, also, second in command of the Second Battalion 365th Infantry. The second waive, under heavy shell fire and gas bombs from the artillery, moved up to occupy the position first held by the Second commanding Battalion. While making this advance Lieutenant Walter Lowe,

waive.

A, was gassed, but he remained with his company, directing its movements until a short time before the order came to cease firing on the

Gompany

morning of the eleventh. While the 365th Infantry was fighting like real heroes the units in the other battalions were doing exactly the same thing. The first objective reached by the 366th was Bois-de-Boivotte.

The

units in the

first

moved over The artillery

assault waive

the top at exactly seven o’clock on the morning of November 10. advance as far laid down a barrage for the advancing troops and protected their

bombardment with gas, shrapnel and machine gun difficult as well as extremely fire from the German trenches made progress shells dangerous. The troops, accustomed as tliey were by this time to bursting their first and gas bombs, ignored all personal danger and fought their way to

as possible,

but the

terrific

objective with but few casualties.

The

fighting was furious during the early

729

War and Peace

was able

part of the day, but the organization

ground, varying from three to

The River.

frve

to

capture and hold

much

kilometers in depth.

367th Infantry occupied a position on the west side of the Mosselle

Two companies

of the Second Battalion were in the

with others in support and reserve.

The

first

fighting units reached

assault waive

and held

their

and although the fighting was brisk the 367th did not lose a single man. With the darkness came a cessation of intensive action, the troops were objective

reorganized and plans formulated for a renewal of the attack early the next

morning.

engagement the 92nd Division occupied a position a little southeast of the strong fortifications of Metz. The 165th French Division was on our right and the Seventh American Division was on our left and we kept in touch with both these divisions during the night and prepared for what In this general

subsequently proved to be the

final struggle of the great

world war the

following morning.

At dawn the

air

was cool and damp;

it

was

slightly cloudy, with a little fog in

enough to give it a dull-gray color and to prevent the from seeing more than a few hundred yards in the direction of the

the atmosphere, just soldiers

enemy.

The keen

whistling noises

as they passed over

was 4:30 A.M.,

made by the

shells

10:45.

upon

the

for at that

The 350th

woods

artillery'

our heads on their missions of death told us that the hour time the 351st Field Artillery Regiment began

advance upon Bois La Cote and Champey. This until

from our supporting

in the

o’clock A.M., forty-five

fire

was kept up continuously

Field Artillery Regiment, also, renewed

its

and

north of Bouxieres-sur-Froidmont in support of the advancing infantry.

same

units that

attack

neighborhood of Bois Frehaut, but ceased firing at 10 minutes earlier than the 351st. At five o’clock the First

Battalion of the 350th Field Artillery laid a rolling barrage across

of the

its

just

Many

engaged the enemy the day before were again struggling

for additional gains in the direction of

brought up from the support

Metz. Several fresh companies were

to join those

who had

so gallantly repulsed the

enemy on Saturday and together made a supreme effort to deliver a blow that would silence the German guns and put the Huns to flight in disorder. The only thing that saved the Kaiser’s army in this sector from a crushing defeat was the order to cease firing at 1 1 o’clock.

At one time during the morning engagement the 56th Infantry (white) of the 7th Division, while advancing, ran into a strong barbed wire entangle-

ment that had not been destroyed by artillery. Further advance was impossible and

to retire

machine gun

under heavy fire

from the German’s big guns and merciless meant annihilation. Major Charles L. Appleton of the fire

367th Infantry, seeing the desperate situation into which the 56th Infantry had

730

An

worked

itself,

Essay Toward a History of the Black

manoeuvered

Man

in the

several platoons to a position

Great

War

where they could

hit

the

Germans from

the flank and cover the retirement of the 56th. This timely

act

on the

Major Appleton probably saved the 56th from complete

part of

destruction.

When the bugle sounded the call

to cease firing,

Company H

of the 365th

Infantry held 800 yards of the battle-front, five kilometers of which was taken

from the Germans under the heavy guns of Metz, and held against odds one under intense shell and machine gun fire.

five to

OTHER AGENCIES So much

for the

92nd

Division.

It

never had a fighting chance until the

last

was a centre of intrigue from the beginning and its weak and vacillating General spent most of his time placating the Negro haters on his staff and among his field officers, who wished nothing so much as the failure of the division as a fighting unit. How different a story if Charles Young had day of the war.

been

let to

It

lead his own!

Negro troops was the Young Men’s Christian Association. The few who came to Red Cross hospitals were, with a few exceptions, not only Jim-Crowed but the assisting agencies the only one that paid any attention to

Of

officers

were put

in

wards with their men.

The

white Young

Men s

Christian

Association secretaries usually refused to serve Negroes in any way. Very few colored secretaries were sent and an attempt was made at first to get rid of the

on the ground that equality of Negroes were

best of these,

human when

a colored

man was placed

never, however, furnished

in

on the manhood rights and seditious. Matters were greatly improved general charge of the colored work. He was their beliefs

enough men and only three women

for his vast

field until after the Armistice.

one subject the white Commanding Officers of all colored units showed more solicitude than on the organization and fighting efficiency of the troops, — that was the relations of the colored officers and men with the

On

women

of France.

They began by

officially stigmatizing the

Negroes

as

they solemnly warned the troops in speeches and general orders not even to speak to women on the street; ordered the white military police to spy on the blacks and arrest them if they found them talking with French women. rapists;

The

white troops, taking their cue from

and rumors among the peasants and

all this

villagers

senseless pother, spread tales

and sought

to chastise

Negroes

and offending women. One officer, a high-minded gentleman, graduate and Phi Beta Kappa man of a leading American institution, was court-martialed for

keeping company with

in a perfectly respectable girl of a family of standing

731

— War and Peace

one of the towns where Negroes were quartered and while General Headquarters did not uphold the court-martial, it took occasion severely to reprimand the officer and remove him to a Labor Battalion.

The

result of all this a-do

was simply unnecessary bitterness

among Ne-

among the French. The Negroes resented being publicly stigmatized by their own countrymen as unfit for association with decent people, but the French men and women much preferred the courtesy and bonhomie of the Negroes to the impudence and swagger of many of the groes and mystification

whites. In practically every left

French town where the Negro troops stayed they

and sympathetic friends among men,

close

women and

children.

While the 92nd Division was in France there were fourteen trials for attacks on women, six of which were acquitted; of the other eight, three men were convicted of simple against

women;

of these, three cases are

been acquitted by the

man

assault, leaving five possible cases of grave still

court, but the verdict has not

has been found guilty and hanged.

belonged

to a

undecided

It is

Labor Battalion and was sent

only

at this writing,

one has

been reviewed, and fair to

to the division

crime

ONE

man simply for trial. No add that

this

other American division in France has a better record in this respect.

THE END and preliminary statement of the part the Negro played in the Great War. There is much in the tale that is missing and some mistakes, to be

This

is

a partial

corrected by fuller information and reference to documents. But the

main

outlines are clear.

A nation with a great disease set out to rescue civilization; with

it

pered

it

took the disease

form and that disease of race-hatred and prejudice hamactions and discredited its finest professions.

in virulent

its

No adequate

excuse for America’s actions can be offered: Grant that

many

of the dismissed and transferred colored officers were incompetent, there possible excuse for the persistent

is

no

and studied harrowing of admittedly compe-

men, to which every black officer testifies with a bitterness unexampled Negro American history; there was no excuse for the persistent refusal to

tent in

promote Negroes, despite their records testified to even by the French; there was no excuse for systematically refusing Negro officers and soldiers a chance something of greater and more beautiful France by curtailing leaves and quartering them in the back districts. to see

On

the other hand, there

is

not a black soldier but

who

is

their

glad he went,

glad to fight for France, the only real white Democracy; glad to have a new.

732

An

Essay Toward a History of the Black

clear vision of the real, inner spirit of

camouflage

is

Man

in the

Great War

American prejudice. The day of

past.

This history

will

be enlarged and expanded, embellished with maps and

and with the aid of an editorial board, consisting of the leading Negro American scholars and the most distinguished of the black soldiers who fought in France, will be issued by the National Association for the Advancepictures

ment of Colored People and The Crisis, in three volumes, great struggle of the modern Negro race for liberty.

733

in

honor of the

first

Germany and

I

am

going

to write

The Courier

Hitler

four letters about

Germany.

already a word here and there about minor aspeets of the

am

sure

my

friends have understood

my

Even my was opened to

sent nne a minor reeeipt to sign,

smuggled

have written

German

and reticenee:

hesitations

wasn’t safe to attempt anything further.

I

seene. it

I

simply

when Mrs. DuBois if money was being

mail, see

in.

But now

my sojourn — or at least shall have long before this is its reaehing The Courier on time am taking it to a

have ended

I

published; and to insure

I

foreign land to mail.

This does not

Germany.

in

sideration.

It

long time in

I

mean

have.

I

that

1

have not enjoyed

my

five

and more months

have been treated with uniform courtesy and con-

would have been impossible for me to have spent a similarly any part of the United States, without some, if not frequent

cases of personal insult or discrimination.

I

cannot record a single instance

here. It

is

always difficult to characterize a whole nation.

know 67

million people,

have used

my

much

less indict

eyes and, to a lesser extent,

them.

my

I

ears.

One cannot

really

have simply looked on. I

I

have talked with some

people, but not widely, nor inquisitively.

Chiefly

I

have traveled.

I

have been

in all parts of

Germany:

including Mecklenburg, Brandenburg, Hanover and Schlesien; the

Hansa

the North

cities

of the northwest and East Prussia;

I

in Prussia, I

have seen

have looked on

Sea and the Alps, and traveled through Saxony, Thuringia,

Wurtemburg and Bavaria. have seen the waters of the Rhine, Elbe, Weser, Oder and Danube. have seen all the great German cities: Berlin, Hamburg, Luebeck, Bremen, both Erankforts, Cologne, Mayence,

Westphalia,

I

I

From

the Pittsburgh Courier,

December

5,

1936.

734

Germany and

and Munich, not

Stuttgart, Breslau

to

Hitler

mention Vienna and Strassburg.

have

I

seen Germany; and not in the mists of a tourist’s rush, but in slow and thoughtful leisure. I have read German newspapers of all sorts and places;

have read books, listened

I

and watched

work and

a nation at

gone

to lectures,

play.

and movies,

to operas, plays

have talked with a half dozen

I

officials.

overwhelming majority stands back of Adolf Hitler today. has food and housing, and is, on the whole, contented and prosperous. Unemployment in four years has been reduced from seven to

Germany Germany

in

common all

kinds.

people,

Food

good, pure and cheap. Public order

less.

is

almost no visible crime. this,

new homes for the and new public works of

The whole nation new roads, new public

two millions or

Germany

is

silent,

And

is

dotted with

buildings

yet, in direct

is

and there

perfect,

and contradictory paradox

nervous, suppressed;

it

is

to all

speak in whispers; there

is

no

public opinion, no opposition, no discussion of anything; there are waves of enthusiasm, but never any protest of the slightest degree. Last winter 12 million were in want of food and clothes, and this winter not less than 9 million, perhaps 10. There is a campaign of race prejudice carried on,

openly, continuously and determinedly against

all

non-Nordic

races,

but

which surpasses in vindictive cruelty and public have ever seen; and I have seen much. Here is the paradox insult anything and contradiction. It is so complicated that one cannot express it without

specifically against the Jews, 1

seeming

And the testimony Olympic Games is worse

to convict one’s self of deliberate misstatement.

of the casual, non-German-speaking visitor to the

than valueless in any direction.

When

group or

a

a nation acts incomprehensively, the

answer

lies

in a

background of fact, unknown or imperfectly comprehended by the onlooker. So it is in this case. Germany has lived through four horrors in living history These are; War; that no people can experience and remain entirely normal. the few the Treaty of Versailles; Inflation; Depression, and Revolution. Save

who were

actually in the trenches of the A. E.

has no adequate notion of war. ’khere is

the most eloquent and ghastly

straight shaft of gray granite, their lives for

German its

city!

you

in

this

Then came is

it

a

war

memory

I

our generation in America

monument

in

Hamburg which

have ever seen.

It

is

a square,

says simply: “40,000 sons of this city gave

1914—18.’ Forty thousand dead youth from a single

concealed ingenuity.

although

and

is

F.,

a treaty of

peace which was no

One might agree

by no means

in

than dex

blaming Germany

as clear today as

735

less

it

seemed then

for the

to us

ilish in

war



— but who

War and Peace

of the laymen

German

hamstring

difficult that

deprived

knew

or

dreamed

industry as to

bankruptcy followed

Germany

that

make

what the peace

was so

to

Germany so on a scale that was revolutionary? The treaty the earning of a living in

not simply of one-eighth of her

arable land, but what was far

treaty did

more important, of

territory,

population and

a fifth of her coke; three-

fourths of her iron, one-fourth of her blast furnaces, two-thirds of her zinc

foundries, one-fifth of her livestock,

her railway equipment. principles,

all

of her merchant marine, and most of

And then saddled her with

which no land could or did

a debt based

pay. In other words, in order to

establish peace, the capitalists of England, France

orderly return of

Germany

to

on unheard-of

and America made the

work and self-support impossible without

internal revolution. This revolution

meant

a redistribution of wealth

and

Germany comparable only to the French and Russian revolutions. And the people who paid in Germany were the thrifty, the workers, the civil employees — the very classes who had opposed war in the first place. And the persons who bore the brunt of criticism in Germany for the treaty were the labor unions, the teachers, the middle class who hated war and wanted to build a new state, above the power of capital and the army. Adolf Hitler rode income

into

in

power eventually by

calling the

ated the treaty of Versailles, traitors

government of Germany, which negoti-

who

stabbed

Germany

in the

back when

she was down.

Germany

not only had the flower of her youth murdered in a senseless war,

but had her bread and butter taken away in an equally senseless peace.

The

accumulated savings of the nation disappeared; pensions, in a land of pensioned civil servants, were stopped; loans were paid in worthless money; property values dropped to nothing; industry was in bankruptcy and labor out of work. She struggled up and partially out of the morass, but when depression settled on the world, Germany was worse off than others, because she was hopelessly in debt, and by the unanimous decision of the world not allowed to pay her debt in the only possible way: by the export of her manufactures. Adolf Hitler rode into power by accusing the world of a

Germany by economic starvation. He promised to remedy this by making Germany self-sufficient and giving her an army capable of defending her rights. Revolution was staring Germany in the face, and a Marxian revolution which would make a dictatorship of the proletariat and made a socialistic state. Industry was frightened; the Junkers (landed noconspiracy to ruin

were frightened; the managers, engineers and small shopkeepers were frightened; they all submitted to a man who had at first been a joke, then a pest, and who suddenly loomed as a dictator. Union labor, with its 8,000,000 bility)

736

Germany and

Hitler

members, holding the wide balance of power in the state, proceeded to squabble as to whether to usher in the milennium immediately or gradually, and through this squabble Adolf Hitler and Big Industry drove a carriage and four.

He made

of change

is

a state

without a single trade union and where the discussion

a crime.

737

Africa

If

Hitler wins,

and

in the

Germany and

out between

long run he cannot win, Afriea will be parceled Italy. Its

people

will

be subjected

to

an attempted

caste system resembling slavery, except that they will be trained to certain

modern techniques; techniques which conqueror, will

mean

if

they are at

his eventual disaster. All of the

all

valuable to the

new

cultural patterns

which have held revolt in Africa back: Christian missions, modern education and modern languages, will have their holds loosened and one may expect a frightful whirl of unloosened passion which no power in Fascist Europe can long hold back. If

Hitler wins,

and he cannot win, there

will

nor Indian nationality, so long as he can help

it

be no recognition of Chinese

power to oppose it. India racial and political faction but

or has

may temporarily fly to pieces through religious, not for long. The power which has built the Indian Congress will eventually weld a new unity. And China will see her salvation not in white England and America but

brown India and yellow Japan. Logically Japan, if the Fascists win, would dominate Dutch India, British East India and Australia. But that in

leaves the puzzle of the relation of Japan to Hitler

and Mussolini. Eventually

Japan must make a tremendous choice. Outside of her justifiable hatred of Great Britain and suspicion of America, she has got to realize that the new

which has already essentially transformed the Western World which she has been imitating, must be yielded to in Japan; that will be industrial revolution

easier than essentially,

it

appears; for as Matsuoka, himself, once told me: within and

Japan

is

already Communistic.

But Hitler cannot win, simply because no such organization as he has today built up, can command the brains, the loyalty and the man-power

which

From

will

[he

enable

it

to

Amsterdam News,

conquer the world.

July 12, 1941.

738

Closing Ranks Again

It

seems with regard

to the Roberts report that the Japanese attack

Harbor was a surprise only Slowly there

is

coming

to those

who were

on

Pearl

too lazy to be surprised.

to the fore in this

war

just as years

ago in the

and the First Revolutionar>’ War, the Civil War, the Spanish-American War World War, the question of Negro patriotism to the United States.

There

are always two extreme attitudes:

whatever the white nation against taking

up arms

either of these

two paths.

One,

perfect acquiescence in

says, thinks or does; the other,

for the

United

States.

open rebellion

Few, of course, have followed

that its Each generation faced by the horror of war is disposed to think gone. So that there is attitude is wiser and braver than that of generations

of Negroes toward the already rising today controversy about the attitude World War. second World War as compared toward that in the First

m

The wrote Philadelphia Tribune has referred to an editorial which I In it I said: ‘That which the Crisis in July, 1918, called “Close Ranks.” and German power represents today spells death to the aspirations of Negroes and democracy. Let us not hesitate. Let all darker race for equality, freedom and close our ranks while this war lasts, forget our special grievances

The

us,

and the Allied nations shoulder to shoulder with our own white fellow citizens that are fighting for democracy.” twenty-three years after with no desire to change a I re-read this editorial for democracy with word. We shall stand ready to fight shoulder to shoulder soldiers of

any race or color and

questions this program let

for a

democracy of

all

him remember what preceded

men.

If

anyone

this editorial

of

reduced the had begun the campaign against lynching which join our crunumber of lynchings fifty percent and made President Wilson We had fought for Negro officers in the A.E.F., and secured seven 1918:

We

sade.

From

the

Amsterdam News, February

14, 1942.

739

War and Peace

hundred which

is

probably twice as

many as we have now

or will have in this

We

had answered completely the whispered charges of German propaganda and withstood the open espionage of state and national officers. We war.

we

traced “the real

to the despising of the darker races

by the dominant

declared in a national conference in Washington that

World War groups of men.” We had cause of

this

black soldiers

and publicized lynchings, defended the of Houston, and encouraged and directed migration of Negroes investigated

from the South.

We

said frankly in a Crisis editorial in

war

for Liberty with clean hands.

feet

when we

rise to

cannot survive

if it

September, 1917; “Let us enter

May no

this

blood-smeared garments bind our

make the world safe for Democracy. The New Freedom means Waco, Memphis and East St. Louis. We cannot

lynch 2,867 untried black

men and women

in thirty-one years

and pose

bow our shamed heads and awful war we raise our weapons

successfully as leaders of civilization. Rather let us in sack cloth

and ashes declare

that

when

against the enemies of mankind, so, too,

we

our hands

raise

America

To

same hour here at home Heaven and pledge our sacred honor to make our own and

in that

a real land of the free.”

end we not only responded

and bought Liberty Bonds kept Colonel Young from being summarily retired from the Army. We

this

but also

to

in

to the draft

hammer at discrimination as, for instance, in a Crisis editorial January, 1918: “How precious the Negro is when society wants to use him! How indispensable is his loyalty, when the army is recruited for the great war to 'make the world safe for democracy!’ How welcome are his dollars, when a continued

to

.

$5,000,000,000 Liberty Loan

.

.

Government. Does anybody think of denying the black man the opportunity to do the work which nobody else will do? Has anybody urged that the black man be exempted from military service?

is

Has any black

floated by the

man

laid

down

his fifty dollars in a Liberty

Loan booth, and been refused a bond?” 1 spoke for a united Negro press when at a meeting of Negro editors in Washington in August, 1918, I wrote the resolutions which they unanimously adopted: “The American Negro does not expect to have the whole Negro problem settled immediately; he is not seeking to hold up a striving country and a distracted world by pushing irrelevant personal grievances as a price of loyalty; he is not disposed to catalogue, in this tremendous crisis, all

his

complaints and

disabilities;

share in helping to win the war for

of the

fruits thereof;

— but

of consideration which

he

will

is

more than willing to do his full democracy and he expects his full share he

is

today compelled to ask for that

enable him

to

minimum

be an efficient fighter

for

victory.”

We may

sadly admit today that the First

740

World War did not bring us

Closing Ranks Again

democracy. Nor

will the second. In neither

slackers. In neither

war have we been cowards nor

war have we surrendered nor

will

we

surrender our free

right to think.

We

close ranks again but only,

democracy not only

for

now

as then, to fight for

democracy and

white folk but for yellow, brown and black.

741

The Negro and

This

is

war

a

for

freedom.

War

the

Whose freedom?

Is it

for the

freedom of Asiatics and Africans?

Is it

for the

freedom of white

men

to migrate to Africa

and of black

men

to

migrate to Australia? for the

Is it

in

freedom of Negroes

West Africa Ifth is

Southern United States and Negroes

to vote?

we

the freedom

is

in the

are fighting for,

my gun

on

is

my

shoulder.

THE NEGRO AND THE WAR I

said

this

some time since

that

I

feared that the

war than he got out of the

last;

but

I

think

Negro would get I

was wrong.

whole, as though the American Negro was on the way of this war especially as his war

becomes

This has not been wholly successful but

industry.

extraordinary degree.

It

has broken

and trade unions, and

it

will

Necessary, but of course,

1 here probably through

will

breached.

it

fight for

out

entrance into

has succeeded to an

bar after bar held up by employers

difficult.

be more Negro

officers

inducted into the army

war than the seven hundred or more who received commissions World War. It will be difficult, to be sure, to do this but there are

It

is

cance. Chiefly

men do

hammered [he

on the

only be necessary to hold the ground thus gained.

indications that this will be true.

From

looks,

this

in the First

white

down

out of

to gain a great deal

determined

a

It

less

The

Southern-infested navy has been

not a large opening or an opening of any particular it is

a matter of getting additional colored labor for tasks

not

like.

Nevertheless,

further open.

Amsterdam News, May

9, 1942.

742

it

is

a

breach and

it

needs

signifi-

which to

be

The Negro and

There

are, of course,

authority in Washington farms.

The Negro

troops

many

the

War

things to be feared.

means forced

The

recent re-sluiffhng of

labor for colored soldiers probably on

who have gone

to Australia

have undoubtedly gone

true, of course, that in

modern war the

labor

as laborers

and not as

element

of increasing importance as compared with the actual fighters. But

is

fighters. It

is

on the other hand, the kind of labor done and the circumstances of its doing leave

room

for

much

unfortunate discrimination. This

watched.

743

is

a fact carefully to

be

Negro’s

War Gains and Losses

Now that the Second World War has ended what have we Americans of Negro descent lost and gained? We may record five groups of losses: 1

.

War itself is always a

the oppressed leaving a

which bears hardest among the segregated and legacy of death and destruction which is almost loss

incalculable. 2.

We

have suffered the tremendous disadvantage of a “jim-crow” army

and of segregation

in

army

similar segregation in civil

human

circles

which

will

form and have formed

This segregation

life.

beings in their ordinary

life:

In order to

is

a basis of

not simply separation of

make

segregation effective

it

has been found necessary to suppress ability and deny opportunity.

The

and humiliation of Japan marks the tragedy of the greatest colored nation which has risen to leadership in modern times. No matter how 3.

defeat

we

explain and assess the damage, the result of thinking along the lines of race and color will affect human relations for many years and will excuse contempt

and

injustice toward colored skins.

It

will set

back the time of the emancipa-

tion of the majority of people in the world. 4.

If

the military regimentation of living will retard civilization,

it

means

the training of men through long and costly years for

and then afterwards uplift. 5.

to

murder and destruction use these same men and the same methods for cultural

The whole proposal is impossible. And finally, we have seen in this war,

to

our amazement and

distress, a

marriage between science and destruction; a marriage such as we had never dreamed of before. We have always thought of science as the emancipator. We see

it

From

now

as the enslaver of

the Chicago Defender,

mankind.

September

15, 1945.

744

Negro's

SIX We

War Gains and

GAINS

L

Losses

S

I

T’

E

D

turn from this sad picture to six gains which have

necessarily because of

it,

come

out of war, not

but in most cases despite the organized de-

struction:

The world

1.

of culture has been compelled to

of democracy at a time in our development

and ignore democracy.

trust

basic idea that the

the long run rest

We

when we

upon

the wishes and the will of

a re-statement

are beginning to dis-

come back to the human beings must in those who are governed

have been compelled

government and direction of

make to

and guided.

We have been compelled to admit Asia into the picture of future political and democratic power. We can no longer regard Europe as the sole center 2.

of the world.

depend 3.

The development

largely

We

human

of

upon what happens

have been compelled

beings in the future

is

going to

in Asia.

admit China

to

power.

as a great

When

was because of attack by Europe. When the attack continued it was through the acquiescence of Europe and America; and when finally against the will of the white world we were dragged into the great

China was

first

attacked

it

we took up and espoused the cause of Chinese freedom and independence because we knew well that the Japanese cry of “Asia for the Asiatics” would be turned against us unless we helped China maintain her center of Asiatic war,

independence.

RUSSIAN RECOGNITION 4.

We

have been compelled

spite of the fact that her

opposed

to

recognize Russia as an equal country in

economic organization

is

directly

and categorically

to the profit-making industrial organization of the

And moreover because

Western world.

of the prominence given Russia today in this war, her

backing of China and alliance with China means that China

will

not be

at the

Western Europe. The dream of Europe as the profiteer of China and the controller of her destiny through its efforts, falls before the

sole direction of

menace of Russia. More specifically 5.

there can be no doubt but w'hat India and the

Netherlands and French Indo-China are going thing approaching autonomy in government. 6. itself,

And

last

there

is

upheaval

in

in

our day

to

achieve some-

Pan Africa among the people

north west and south; but also and

just as significantly

745

Outch

in Africa

among the people

War and Peace

of African descent in the Caribbean area, in South and Central America and in the It

United States of America.

cannot be said

that,

balancing these losses and gains, the war has been

either a vast success or a terrible failure. this

war has a chance

to

It

can be said that civilization

after

go forward and no group of civilized people have

better opportunity to forward the

advance of

Negroes.

746

human

culture than

American

i^fter

his

second expulsion from the

of the principal voices on the far

left. It

NAACP in was now an

1948,

Du Bois became one

article of faith for

him

that

domestic anticommunism and the foreign policy of Soviet containment were camouflage for the military-industrial complex, of which racism was a central

he plunged into the international peace circuit, delivering the closing speech at the 1949 Waldorf-Astoria Peace Conference (“Peace: Freedoms Road for Oppressed Peoples” [1949]), speak-

component.

Now

a battling octagenarian,

None Who Saw another peace rally. He

ing again before the gigantic rally in Paris that same year Paris Will

Ever Forget”), then on

lambasted

NATO

to

Moscow

in testimony before the

for

House Foreign

(

Affairs

Committee

1949”), deof the United States (“Opposition to Military Assistance Act of nounced the Marshall Plan as a reactionary plot, defended the Rosenbergs in

and eulogized Stalin on his death. Du Bois ran for the U.S. Senate on indicted and tried the New York American Labor Party ticket in 1952 and was Department of Justice that in Washington, D.C., as a Russian agent by the

verse,

same year under the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1936. The failure most of the African-American leadership to rally to his defense embittered Du implications Bois and caused him to reassess the deeper economic and class nonviolent passive of current civil rights court victories and commencing Robeson s Persecuresistance demonstrations. In “The Real Reason Behind of

tion” (1958),

he

exploitation

and

stressed again a fatal linkage racial victimization.

749

between opposition

to capitalist

Peace: Freedom’s Road for

Oppressed Peoples

This Cultural and Scientific Conference In a time of hysteria, suspicion

and

hate,

for

World Peace has been

we have succeeded

a suceess.

in bringing face

one of the largest gatherings of creative artists and if all who thinkers the world has seen; and it would have been quite the largest have wished to come were here. Meeting together for three full days, we friendfound wide agreement and sympathy, we have established ideals and

to face in friendly meetings,

ships belting the globe.

We have not and are not now in complete agreement on all matters. one

vital respect

our agreement

is

complete:

world-old habit of wholesale murder of those

convinced, a

relic

of barbarism

bound

No More

who

to destroy

But

m

War! The horrible

disagree with us

is,

we

our best culture unless

are it is

absolutely and definitely abolished.

On

the other hand,

we

are not childishly deceived as to the enormity of

We are many minds the task of organizing and conducting a peaceful world. barriers of and backgrounds, separated not only by space but by the terrible ignorance and misunlanguage and social patterns; we face deliberate crime, but we firmly believe that the greatest of these is misunderderstanding Decent wage, health and schools will one day reduce crime and .

.

.

standing.

misunderstandignorance to manageable proportions. It is in the vast realm of born and flourishes. ing, misrepresentation and doubt, that war is ineurred proves Perhaps unwittingly, the opposition which our effort has this truth

with startling

clarity.

We know and

the saner nation

knows

that

we

from plotting force and violence it is This conference w as not precisely force and violence that we bitterly oppose. American w ay of life. It called to defend Communism nor Socialism nor the that no matter was called to promote peace! It was called to say and say again

are not traitors nor conspirators;

From

and

far

Worker, April 17, 1949, magazine section,

p. 7.

751

The Cold War

wrong

liow right or

ment may

be,

differing systems of belief in religion, industry or govern-

war

not the

is

cessfully be settled for the

To

method by which

their differences

can suc-

good of mankind.

the defense of this absolutely indisputable thesis, proven by oceans of

blood and worlds of

men; and

human

suffering,

that cooperation to abolish

surrender their opinions.

It

simply

we have

invited the cooperation of

all

men

to

war does not compel or even ask

insists that force

is

not reason and beliefs

cannot be changed by suppression.

VAST MAJORITY OF MANKIND ARE DARKER PEOPLES But there

one aspect of our conference which has forced itself upon the attention of us all. That is the effort of the press and certain leaders of public is

opinion to spread the idea that some persons here are by their beliefs and

beyond the pale of humanity

actions so

sympathy nor

as to deserve neither

confidence. Particularly have the people of the Soviet Union been singled out

something bordering on

for

insult

and repeatedly accused of warmongering

and aggression. I

to a is

do not pretend conference

to

be an expert on Russia, but seeing what the press can do

like this in misinterpretation

called aggression in the Balkans

may

and

distortion,

have not received

in 75;

wonder

not be liberation of landless

giving their ignorant masses in 25 years such education as slaves

I

and of sending

their

if

what

serfs

and

American Negro

former masters not to the

legislature but scurrying over the earth like rats distributing lies. All this lied

I

do not know but

about Russia

years,

I

for

one

as

will

it

it

can be

true.

And do know that, I

if

the press has

has lied about American Negroes for three hundred

condemn

neither Russia nor

Communism on

such

testimony.

But beyond and above

and cause of the races, the

many

this there arises

vast majority of

before this conference the plight

mankind who

are not white.

These colored

Chinese, Japanese, Indians and Indonesians; the peoples of Africa,

of those of South America and most of those of the Caribbean, with

Negroes of the United States — these are the vast majority of mankind whose condition and future are the crucial test of the attitudes of fifteen million

those peoples

who

part in colonies or

today

demand mastery of the

dominated

areas, they

world. Secluded for the most

have been enslaved and insulted,

kicked in the teeth and used for the rape and exploitation of the' British, French, Dutch, Belgium, Spanish and Italian empires. This great America, this vast

and

rich land

752

around you

is

built

on the

Peace: Freedom's

Road

for

Oppressed Peoples

and degradation of Africans. Here until well into the second half of the nineteenth century they were sold like cattle. And New York did not stop to picket abolitionists; they tarred, feathered and killed them. Today in

slavery, toil

manhood and citizenship, but to the place where we can at least stand and yell our own protest. We thank the

this

we have

land

risen

from the dead not to

full

that helped us.

America

But we know well that unless we had helped ourselves we would still in New York CiW be exactly where our brothers are in Mississippi, where I ride in library. When Jim Crow cars and would be kicked out of any hotel or public such

a nation arraigns Russia, all that

I

with the best will can

remember

is

that

Union alone of all modern nations has prohibition of race and color words discrimination written into its fundamental law, and that unlike similar

the Soviet

in

our Constitution their law

is

enforced.

STAKE OF DARKER PEOPLES PRESERVATION OF PEACE

IN

when the saw the birth of the League of Nations and I sat in San Francisco darker United Nations was born. In both instances I worked and pled for the mandates at particularly those in imperialist colonies. We got

I

peoples,

Geneva which meant nothing.

We

got trusteeships at San Francisco

and

colonial freedom by there again a determined blocking of all real meaning of and the sole opposithe united effort of Great Britain and the United States,

Marshall Plan the nations helped are the colonial Kai-shek, they are imperialists and no colored people unless, like Chiang

tion of Russia.

Again

in the

puppets of world exploiting investors. the dark world I tell you people of America,

on the move! It wants and It will not be diverted in these will have freedom, autonomy and equality. know what the fundamental rights by dialectical splitting of political hairs. We serfs of European imperiAtlantic Pact proposes for the protection of colonial know why Italy has been promised Ethiopia’s territory by the alists.

is

We

Department of

State.

We know why

the President of the United States goes

Negro American rights is laughed to death by go merrily Democrats and Republicans, and lynching and disfranchisement We know all this and so does every dark man on earth. he white race

fishing

when

the charter of

1

on.

may,

if it

will, tax itself into poverty,

majority of

But

We

this

mankind

will

catastrophe

have no time

What we want

is

for

a

is

and arm

itself for suicide,

but the vast

march on and over them to freedom and self-rule. will. the last which we of the darker world wish or

revenge or for sneering

decent world, where a

753

white men’s tragic mistakes. does not have to have a white

at

man

The Cold War

skin in order to be a

ignorance

is

man. Where poverty

is

not a means to wealth, where

not used to prove, race superiority, where sickness and death are

not part of our factory system.

And

Peace things

depends

first

not an end.

It is

all this is

may be

sacrifice of ages

on world peace.

With peace all which the toil and

the gateway to real civilization.

added. With war,

we

destroy even that

have builded.

754

1

None Who Saw

Paris

Will Ever Forget

I

have attended the greatest meeting of

men

ever assembled in

modern

1911 in times to advance the progress of all men. Xhe Races Congress of London was comparable but quickly forgotten. The first meeting of the of of Nations Assembly in that little Geneva church raised hopes

League

universal significance.

The

War,

of

lifted the hearts

UNO

men,

at

until

Second World the long drawn-out horse-trading on

San Francisco,

after a

the majority of trusteeships revealed the determination to hold in serfdom

mankind. Peace was extraordinary not simply because it of the brought together 2,000 delegates from 60 lands, not only because kept them fastened single-hearted earnestness and deep determination which

The

Paris

outpouring

for

to their seats for five full days.

on sufferance; not with members of a world move-

In Paris the colored world was present; not simply

the appalling Anglo-Saxon condescension; but as

ment

in full right

and with

full participation.

For two days

I

sat

on the

out across the sea presidential tribune representing the United States. I looked 27 from India; two from of faces hour after hour and saw seven Haitians; three from Mongolia; Indonesia; 12 from Madagascar; four from Morocco; Viet-Nam and 18 from French five from Puerto Rico; 13 from Tunis; 60 from

Black Africa.

And

these colored folk took part. At two sessions black

men

presided,

one of

Gabriel d Arboussier, Vicethe best speeches was delivered on Thursday by audience rose to President of the African Democratic Rally, for whom the given a tumultuous applaud; Paul Robeson appeared unannounced and was with long applause. On ovation; Madame Thai Thi Lien spoke for Viet-Nam Prom

the National Guardian,

May

16, 1949.

755

The Cold War

World Committee elected by the Congress was a black African chairman and among the 140 members, 13 were colored. the

To

should be added the colored contingent

all this

at the

those delegates refused visas to enter France. Foremost

vice-

Prague Congress,

among

these were the

40 delegates from China and eight from Korea.

The Manifesto of the World Congress faced definitely the colonial and color questions: “We are against colonialism, which continually breeds armed conflicts and threatens to play a decisive part in unleashing a new World War. We condemn the fostering of race hatred and enmity among peoples.” .

But

it

world

was no mere matter of race and

made

color.

It

was the suffering of a crucified

visible.

saw that

1

.

.

tall

with a face like

daughter went to

woman, Mrs. Kosmodemyanskaya, the mother of Jesus, stand and tell how her 18-year-old war to defend American “democracy”; how she was stripped white-haired Russian

by the Nazis and driven naked into the winter, beaten with straps and hanged, yet never betrayed her comrades.

A

few nights

ment,

I

sat

lines that

later, in

woman

of a

deputy of the French

woman, almost youthful looked down and on her

beside a beautiful young

dimly crossed her

face.

1

camp numbers burned

concentration

my mother and

father;

In the Congress

no

home

the

and

legs talked to us.

crying for God’s sake

I

my out,

into her flesh.

brother and I

She

— my husband.”

saw the crippled and maimed

Parlia-

save for tired wrist

saw the

said simply: “I lost

— one soldier with

visioned the poverty, the hurt, the misery of a world,

let

us at least have Peace, to heal our wounds.

the bitter hatred toward an

America determined

to

I

sensed

make money out

of the

world’s misery.

Above from

all this

all

looms

in

my memory that spectacle

of Sunday, April 24,

France and half of the world 100,000 persons crowded and

the Buffalo stadium; filed out to let another 100,000 I

never before saw a hundred thousand

strutting

and showing

off as

human

Americans do on

when

filed into

in.

beings. Fifth

And

they were not

Avenue. They were

walking and hobbling and falling in faintness and crying. Peace! Peace! It was unforgettable. No lying, distortion and tw isting of our prostituted press can conceal or erase the heartbreaking significance of this spectacle.

None who

saw'

it

will ever forget.

756

V

to Military

Opposition

Assistance Act of 1949

Dr. to

Du BOIS:

at the request

appear here

of the Continental Peace Congress

Mexico next month and of the Council on African Affairs to war. The against the proposal for the United States to arm Europe for

be held

protest

I

Congress

in

is

asked to vote

down payment

of $1.5 billion together with un-

sums in the future to implement the Atlantic pact. in desperate This huge sum is not for education, although our schools are land, nor for need of help. It is not for infantile paralysis which is sweeping the putting to work the cancer which is killing thousands. It is not for curbing and and mad waters of those great rivers which annually kill men, women, leaving muddy and children and destroy their homes, stock, and property, enough money to spend for stinking disease behind. This rich country has not

specified

and waste, or for the old-age security of its workers, murder men, women, and but nevertheless is asked to spend a vast treasure to insane; to destroy property children; to blind and cripple them and drive them jeopardize the whole by fire and flood; and for the third time in 50 years to fighting ignorance, disease,

edifice of civilization.

We

arms are

are assured that these

promised that the pact was this assurance.

Gentlemen,

Thank

for peace,

Mr, Acheson this a

s

logic

is

for peace,

not arms.

not war

None

— just

as

we were

but the stupid believe

flawless for fools.

pact for peace.

you, gentlemen;

now arms

for the pact, not for

war for peace. Russia? We do not mention Russia. It is simple, gentlemen.

war but

for

peace,

We just must fight Russia.

Assistance Act of J949; House, Committee on Foreign Affairs, Mutual Defense 28-29 and August 1-2, 5 and 8, Hearings on H.R. 5748 and 5895, 81st Cong., 1st sess., July U.S., Congress,

757

The Cold War

We are asked or that Russia

is

to believe that this

eountry

is

ready to conquer the world.

in

We

danger of attack from Russia did not believe this

when we

asked 10,000,000 Russians to die in order to save the world from Hitler. did not believe

began

it

to believe

We

when we begged Russian help to conquer Japan. We only it when we realized that the Russian concept of a state was

not going to collapse but was spreading.

Assuming right

that

you do not

do we assume that

it

and even

like

can be stopped by force?

we can conquer the world and make have the atom bomb. Even

and

our

justice of

Why

in

God’s

success in ruling

We

fear Russian

if this

communism, by what

One

idea seems to be that

do our bidding because we are rich and were true it begs the question of the right it

rule.

name do we want to control the earth? Is it because of our man? We want to rule Russia and we cannot rule Alabama. Puerto Rico and gave

tried to rule

it

the highest suicide rate in the

world.

We sought to rule China and have just confessed our failure. We set out to rule Germany and apparently our only result surrender is

the very forces

How

which we fought

a

world war

have we equipped ourselves

to

to

subdue.

to teach the

world?

To teach the world democracy, we chose a Secretary of State trained in the democracy of South Carolina. When we wanted to unravel the worst economic snarl of the modern world, we chose a general trained in military tactics at

borders If

West

we summon

we aim

and when we want

Point;

to study race relations in

world we have got to learn

have got

niggers

and

centers of real learning

to clear

to rule ourselves.

Army and

got to free our science from the control of the

We

own

We

have

a baseball player.

to rule the

make our schools

our

Navy.

We have got to

and not of propaganda and

our minds of unreasoning prejudices.

hysteria.

We who

hate

darkies, propose to control a world full of colored people. Will

they have no voice in the matter?

Without exact and careful knowledge of this world, how can we guide it? Yet we know that our knowledge of the world today is fed to us by a press whose what the owners of the press order them to say. This is not the fault. If they want to eat they will write as they are told. It is our fault,

reporters say reporters’

who

are unwilling to pay even

which pays millions assume

is

for control of

morning news. Big business what it wants printed. We naively

cents for our

news

gets

what we read in our press would convince us that we have

that

reflection

what

5

the whole truth,

in

America no complete picture of

transpiring behind the iron curtain.

If

we

never

made

a right

and two

758

lies

a little

retort with the assertion that

Russians are equally deceived as to conditions here, that

dwo wrongs

when

is

do not

is

no excuse

spell the truth.

for us.

Opposition

Assistance Act of 1949

to Military’

would be one thing and time would answer asked to begin a dliird World War on it. But it threatens to end in war. We are the assumption that we are the possessors of truth and right and able to pound If all this

ended

in opinion, that

our beliefs into the world’s head by brute foree. dins is a crazy idea and it is worse than folly to iry' it. If we have to answer to human wealth and happiness

we do

not have to force

Ideas are seldom I

will

modern

human

men

to believe

changed by

it

by atom bombs.

force.

not say that war has never advanced mankind, but I will aver that in times it would be hard to prove that of 1,000 wars 100 had added to progress.

Wliat ever

is

true in the past,

it is

certain that today

no world war can bring

success to any nation.

Of course, we know this is true of war as usually fought, but we think that we can now fight by push-button and machine, that human beings will only be necessary

in

mopping

up.

We Americans will

not

fight,

we

John do from such

will let

and Jacques and possibly Hans — while we pay the bill pockets as we can reach most easily. This is crude self-deception and makes us today the most hated nation on were invented, when earth. The world indulged in that dream when arrows il;

— John

gunpowder was first used, when armored battleships and submarines apcure for war is peared. It is a dream which never will be realized. No, the only as to avoid force. reason. We have got to know and study the facts and act so Otherwise we are Let’s face

it.

lost.

We fight China. We fight Russia. We win

or lose or stalemate.

we do with 150,000,000 Russians and 450,000,000 Cermany Chinese? What would we know in their case more than we knew in life except their eventual or Japan? What would convert them to our way of guns, our real recourse? belief in it? And is not belief, fact and reason, and not What hinders us from beginning to reason now before we fight? Why are we afraid to reason and wait and persuade? Chairman KeE: Excuse me. Doctor. The bells have rung a straight noquornm call. We will take a short recess at this time. If

we

win, what can

(Thereupon the committee recessed from 12:20 P. M. Chairman KeE: The committee will come to order.

You may proceed. Dr.

Du

BoiS:

Dr.

Du

to 12:57

P.

M.)

Bois.

We are afraid.

For

we

stop logical thinking.

We

invent witch

word of exorcism was love and murder of “abolitionist.” He was a "nigger lover.” He believed in free Today the word is kind slave masters. He ought to be lynched and mobbed. questions “Communist.” Never mind its meaning in a man’s mind. If anybody advocates civil rights for the power of wealth, wants to build more lAWs,

words.

If in

1850 an American disliked

759

slavery, the

The Cold War

Negroes, he

is

a

Communist,

And

his job or land in

jail.

progressive citizen

who

a revolutionist, a

yet there

scoundrel, and

liable to lose

is

not today in this Nation an honest

is

many of the

does not share in his beliefs

basic ideas of

communism. I

am

ideals of socialism as laid

teenth century: social

and

I

believe in the abolition of poverty.

power of wealth.

political

just distribution

unless

Communists insofar as they believe the great down by the world s great thinkers since the seven-

a fellow traveler with

human

of wealth. There

progress

is

is

I

I

believe in curbing the

believe in planned industry

in this

revolutionary.

and more

body of belief nothing revolutionary,

There

is

nothing which has not been

advocated by the best thinkers in three centuries.

But what we are being taught is

to believe

today

that Russian

is

communism

not socialism but something dishonest, misleading, and eventually

while our capitalist system alone Calling names does not

is

light

and

evil



truth.

We

settle this controversy.

Russia an authori-

call

tarian state.

So are we.

and must be more or less slave states. They differ in degree of control over citizens and progressive states look forward to decrease of state control, and increase of individual freedom, but Russia, starting with All states are

90 percent of illiteracy in 1917, could not educated people can rule successfully.

start as a full, free

democracy. Only

Russia showed her faith in democracy by promptly decreasing her illiteracy to less

We

than 10 percent in 30 years.

showed our

sells

we have planned economy.

rage at planned economy, but

our crops.

It

our wages and

sets

manufacture and when, where

But democracy has no part

to sell in

system, by the great trusts of steel,

it.

fixes

our prices.

is

railroad, bank,

That,

we

strictly in private

done by our plantation and aluminum, by General Motors and

hands

until

and big farm come crawling

are told,

not socialism.

is

us what to

is

du Pont empire, by Standard Oil, by railroads with bonded debt and watered stock, by Wall Street. This planning

grows and

our goods, and where not.

Our planning

tin,

It

It tells

the

and

Negro

30 percent.

illiteracy to

We

belief in slavery by taking 86 years to reduce

It is

it

their fraudulent

breaks down.

to the

Then

Government for

trust

relief

patriotism.

Let us balance in a reasonable way the case of Russia and the United States. Russia has never attacked us. We not only have invaded Russia but have

allowed our country attacks

on Russia.

We

to

Germany

the center of the most far-reaching verbal

making the United States spy, and informer who hates

are

landlord and exploiter, for joining

become

in 1940.

a refuge for every ousted

Russia.

But we know that she did

760

We blame

this

Russia

only after the

Opposition

to

Military Assistance Act of 1949

United States and Great Britain had refused her

offers of alliance

and she

Germany or stand alone. When Germany turned and treacherously attacked Russia, we awaited her annihilation with equanimity. When, to our surprise, Russia beat Hitler, we welcomed her help but took our own good time before easing her desperate

must

join

struggle in the east by a western offensive.

We sought her alliance did not

dream Japan was

against Japan

and courted her

at Yalta

And even then we

so near collapse.

because we

yielded no

more

than Russia was able to take.

She kept

faith

country paid. Yet

with us in every promise

we peremptorily ended

at a greater cost

than any other

her absolutely essential lend-lease

and since 1945 have apparently sought every excuse to make war upon her. Wliy do we want war with Russia and who leads this demand. We profess to want to protect western Europe against Russia. But it is western Europe which since 1917 has almost continuously attacked Russia. It was western Europe and the United States who after World War I seized countries long recognized expressed and as Russian and organized border nations like Poland for the declared purpose of using them eventually for conquering Russia. It was not imperialist expansion which led Russia to reannex the Baltic States and to secure by every means the close alliance of Poland and the Balkans. The real reason for war on Russia is not her natural effort to protect her borders but her effort to establish a Socialist

state.

own

Our country is ruled by nonhuman person, pro-

incorporated wealth, incorporated so as to form a ownership tected by the fourteenth amendment, secure in organization and talent of of property and able to escape major taxation by hiring the best legal country do not the land. This wealth is forcing us into war. The people of the with want war. You do not want war. But somebody does want war, somebody power and influence, who owns the press and controls radio, cinema, and public opinion has theater. Somebody whose consequent ability to form forced this country into hysteria and

Who

is

this

the group which control the corporate wealth money out of war. They are making money out

It is

They have made of war. They demand

of this land. of the fear

somebody?

fear.

a third

world war to ward off the depression

which threatens their business and tbeir wild waste of public taxation. The enemy of this power is the plan of Russia to found a state where this power of whether or not wealth will be curbed and destroyed. It is not a question as to is or is not Russia can do this, as to whether or not the present Russian state can never succeeding. It is the determination to compel citizens to believe this is of itself a be done and that any attempt to curb the anarchy of rule by w ealth be suppressed and not even discussed. Gentlemen, make no mistake. Russia and

crime

to

761

communism

are not your

The Cold War

enemies. Your enemy, ruthless and implacable, selfish corporate wealth,

order to retain

Balkans that as

is

its

is

the soulless and utterly

organized for profit and willing to

present absolute power.

leading us to war.

What

did

It

we

kill

your sons in

not our sympathy for the

is

care about the Balkans so long

western capital was making 75-percent profit out of oil and slaves?

towed

We kow

and splendid grand dukes so long as they held power. But when Russia drove out idle nobility and foreign exploitation and tried to build a state for the consumer and not the investor, then the world which lives on low wage and monopolized land and resources began to scream that this plan was to czars

impossible and criminal and must be stopped by force. But why?

nism cannot be made

to work,

it

will fall of

its

own

overweight.

commuBut it may If

succeed, and to stop any such chance you are asked to hurl the world into war.

The

cost will be horrible. If we force

effort to recover will

be

nullified.

And

Great Britain and France.

throw the laboring classes of despair. This

is

Europe to a military race for arms her Another war, even if victorious, will ruin

its

all

eventual cost by increased taxation will

the Americas into hopeless turmoil

and

why we are calling next month a continental peace congress

in

Mexico.

The hope

of America, the hope of the world,

is

no more war.

We have the

cure for disagreement and mistake in the United Nations.

Once we

forced the League of Nations on an unwilling world, then

refused because of petty internal politics to support our

and war and depression

own

resulted.

own handiwork and If you

which we would not

in everything,

substitute

war

we

join.

be

easily

failed

Now, when we

for persuasion.

assume

that

you

will

decide

to fight.

We fought Mexico before Congress declared war. We fought Spain after Spain had yielded to our demands. We were nearly thrust into war 2 years ago by an unexplained can

It

are ready again to sabotage our

vote this blank check, gentlemen, do not

when and where

child.

We planned a United Nations, including our

provision for unanimity without

cannot have our own way

own

we

world war before you learn of

in a third

it,

if

mistake.

We

you vote these

billions.

How

does

it

happen

stand of centuries,

is

that the United States today, reversing

now

its

traditional

siding with every reactionary

world, with decadent Turkey, with royalist

movement' in the Greece, with land monopoly in

Korea, with big business in Japan, with British Tories and Fascist Italy? This

There fully,

I

against our better impulses

is

is

am

There

is

much sure also

I

in the

Russian effort

would not

much

in

and saner judgment. at social uplift,

with which,

if f

knew

it

agree.

our own way of

762

life

with which

I

strongly disagree.

Opposition

No

nation

is

to

Military Assistance Act of 1949

program, but every people have a right

perfect, with a perfect

way and no nation has more clearly earned her right to test the doctrines of communism than the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

to try their

Wliether they accomplish their greater aims or whether a reformed capitalism, an

American invention,

will bring

or in combination of both, socialism

modern

world.

It

will

grow out of the

more human happiness,

is

the natural and inevitable aim of the

industrial revolution of the eighteenth

century as flower from seed. Seeking to stop to stop

it

by war

in either case,

it

by Red-baiting

is

stupid. Trying

crime.

is

Let the churches

sit

silent or yell for

witch hunt. Let the Government

call

murder. Let the universities lead the

every effort for social uplift subversive.

You and I, gentlemen, know the truth. God give us guts to follow it. Ghairman KeE; I would like to know something about the background of the two organizations you represent, Mr.

Where Dr.

the headquarters of the Gouncil on African Affairs? BoiS: Twenty-three West Twenty-sixth Street, New York, N. Y.

Du Du

BoiS:

It

Is

that a national organization or

only has local organization but

various parts of the United States

Du

BOIS:

I

and various

is it it

local?

has correspondents in

parts of the world.

membership? do not know. I presume it might be four

Ghairman KeE: What Dr.

Bois.

is

Ghairman KeE: Dr.

Du

is

the

or five hundred.

I

do not think more than that. Ghairman KeE: Your American Gontinental Gongress for Peace, as I understand from your statement, you have never assembled a congress of that character?

Dr. a

new

Du BoiS: No; not for the American Gontinent. That organization which has adherents in practically

is

all

a temporary

and

countries of the

American Gontinent, in North and South America, and in the Garibbean. Ghairman KeE: The organization has not been effected yet, has it? been effected Dr. Du BOIS: The organization for calling the congress has but the congress

itself

has not been held.

Ghairman KeE: That is all. Have you any questions, Mrs. Douglas? Mrs. Douglas: No questions. Ghairman KeE: Mr. Fulton — Mr. FultoN: Have you ever been to Russia? Dr.

Du

BoiS:

I

have been

through Russia from

to Russia twice,

Moscow

to

Manchuria,

once

in

1928 and once

I

passed

in 1936.

know of Mr. FultoN: You have not been there, then, since the war, so you no developments since the war? Dr.

Du

BOIS: No.

763

The Cold War

Mr. P'ULTON: Have you been

in

any country behind the iron curtain since

the war?

Du

Dr.

BoiS: No.

Then

Mr. FultoN;

gone behind the

if

Du

a great

BoiS:

many

have been

felt

iron curtain

would you be inclined Dr.

you

I

there were unbiased gentlemen

and had gone

to

who have

Moscow when you had

not,

judgment of what the approach is? should be very careful and read their judgment. I have met to take their

Russians since the war.

to Russia, like the

many people who

have met a great

I

dean of Canterbury,

for instance,

but whatever

am

only too glad

testimony comes from Russia, or beyond the iron curtain,

I

to consider.

Mr. FultoN:

Just as a personal

comment, I have been up

the war, and had dinner with the commissars, in 1945. iron curtain in Poland

and Czechoslovakia

in

1

in

Moscow since

have been behind the

1947 and have checked on

how

they were being taken over. In addition to that,

I

have checked a

little bit

as to

what

Russia’s actions

have been.

You spoke of her I

have

made

a special

and 1947, arranged

and her taking certain actions in the Balkans. study of what happened and find that Russia, in 1946

satellites

bilateral

— among

agreements with various countries

them Bulgaria — whereby she implemented an economic program and also an arms program, just as we are doing here. I brought that up with Mr. Marcantonio in the debate on the floor on the Creek-Turkey recovery program and he felt that Russia in that instance, when she was implementing an arms program in Bulgaria on a bilateral basis rather than through the United Nations, was wrong.

What do you Dr.

Du

BoiS:

think? I

do not know.

I

should have to know more about the

should think that any attempt within the United Nations bilateral

agreements was not

Mr. P’uurON: Russia did

when we were

starting our

in the interests of the

in

make

I

small

United Nations.

without the United Nations,

this secretly,

program

to

facts.

at a

time

Creece and Turkey.

Now, Mr. Marcantonio objected to our program in Creece and Turkey. said, “If can show you an agreement which you will admit that Russia made of the same nature with someone else in the Balkans, then you will say I

I

that Russia, too, I

showed

is

wrong?”

that to

Mr. Marcantonio’s satisfaction and can

Russia, herself, outside of the United Nations completely,

agreements

to

arm these

Du

BoiS:

If

made

countries.

Now, do you think Russia Dr.

to yours, that

is

wrong?

Russia did that,

I

should think Russia

764

is

wrong.

unilateral

Opposition

Mr. FultoN;

We

to

Military Assistance Act of 1949

will get the

information for you to show you she did do

that.

Dr.

Du

BoiS:

I

am

also sure the

United States was wrong.

Mr. Fulton: Then everything Russia does

is

not correct, in her national

affairs?

Dr.

Du

no perfect country; neither are we. international affairs do you think Russia was

BOIS: No. Russia

Mr. FultoN:

On

is

then, in refusing to permit inspection, so that the atomic

bomb

correct,

could be

internationalized, with every country being inspected?

Dr.

Du

BOIS: Yes;

Mr. FultoN: Dr.

It

think her stand on the atomic

I

was

bomb

was

right.

right?

Du BoiS: Yes; unless the United States internationalized and destroyed

bombs,

see

I

and inspect

no point

at all

of any nation allowing the United States to go in

her.

Mr. FultON: Then suppose we had simultaneously turned them all over, with the know-how, to the United Nations Agency, that Russia would be bound by, too, you would not even try that, would you? Dr.

Du

BOIS:

Mr. FultoN: Dr.

Du

I

Is

should

like to try that.

that not

BOIS: No;

I

what Russia has refused?

do not think

so.

Mr. FultoN: Then you speak of the maladjustments within We do not have slavery here, do we? Dr.

Du

BoiS: Yes,

we

this country.

do.

Mr. FultON: Of what kind? for it, Dr. Du BOIS: Peonage in Mississippi. You cannot punish anybody in Mississippi and either. We have tried, time and time again. I mean places and cannot places in other parts of the South where a man is held to his work get away.

Mr.

Fulton: Does

the

peonage

in

Mississippi

compare with the

25,000,000 in Russia held in peonage and forced labor? Russia. MoreDr. Du BoiS: I do not believe there are any 25,000,000 in over, as said before,

Mr. FultoN: to get the

name names

two wrongs do not make a

right.

We are looking for the basis of the program and we are trying

viewpoint of everyone.

calling, either of Russia, or the

against any people.

On

of us are trying very seriously to avoid

Some

United

States.

We

looking at the program,

are not calling any

when we

find that

under arms in Russia has not disarmed since the war and has the largest force the world, do you not think that

woefully understaffing our

allies in

is

a pitiful

the war, to

commentary that we are so let them protect themselves,

too, just as Russia is?

Dr.

Du

BOIS: No;

I

do not think

so.

I

think that Russia

765

is

keeping her army

The Cold War

because she

is

history of the world since

When

went

I

United States and her

afraid of the

terrible situation

1917 gives her a right

to Russia in 1928,

which they had

and

allies,

be

to

think that the

I

afraid.

noticed the destruction.

1

in restoring the

country and

I

I

noticed the

said,

“Why is

it

more has not been done in the last 10 years?” They said, “The war only ended last year.”

that

That

is,

there was

more

States,

or less,

0 years when western Europe, with the aid of the United was attacking Russia, either actually by arms, or in some 1

other way. Troops went into Russia and fought in Russia

when

there was no

declaration of war. If

were

I

United

a Russian today, the

States, not

one nation

I

because of anything that

would be

had done

I

but because of the things that the United States today

— wants to do to

Mr. FultoN:

May

afraid of would

— as

to the

this

be the

United States

general said here

Russia.

close by saying that the United States has not

I

may we

the habit of waging aggressive war and

been

in

say for the Russian people that

they themselves have not waged outside aggressive war unless attacked.

When

you get two great countries

ever fought each other nor

waged

one of which has

like that, neither

aggressive war,

why

are

you so

afraid of the

United States? Dr.

Du

BoiS:

Moreover,

I

am no more

afraid of the

do not agree with you What was the Mexican War? I

Mr. Fulton: Dr.

Du

Dr.

Du

Dr.

Du

Do you mean

BoiS; That

Mr. FultoN: BoiS:

I

is

what

do not

Dr.

not waged aggressive war.

Much

I

is

usually spelled with capitals.

the war of 1847-49?

mean.

call that

an aggressive war.

depends, you see, on what you

Mr. FulI’ON: Going hack to fear

we have

Which one?

BoiS: Well, the one that

Mr. FultoN:

that

United States than Russia.

to Russia,

do you

feel,

call

an aggressive war.

then, that Russia has

more

from us than we have from them?

Du

BoiS: Yes, decidedly.

morning and heard what was

I

think

if

a Russian

had been here

this

said of the practical inevitability of war, the

advice that the United States take charge of the world in order to contain Russia, think he would have been astonished. 1

Mr. hUL'roN:

We

do not see our Foreign

with any warlike attitude, hut rather to

what

is

correct,

and may

I

Affairs

try to

say this to you, that

Committee

sitting

here

hear and develop and accept

when

I

was up

in Russia,

I

was

never away from the military. for example, to go into the capitol buildings in Russia,

through armed guards; we had

to

be checked and rechecked.

766

we had

to

go

Opposition

We

were checked

To go any place

And

for

Military Assistance Act of 1949

and checked out. Moscow, we were checked.

in

in

example,

to

when

I

tried to take a picture of Lenin’s

me

camera snatched away from

by

a

man

tomb,

with a bayonet, and yet

I

I

had

my

am

an

impartial observer.

Du

Dr.

And may

BoiS:

I

say that

when

1

conscious of absolutely no kind of effort to stop

wanted I

I

in Russia in

1928

I

was

me from seeing anything that

I

to see.

was

down

was

to

in Kronsted,

I

was

in

Moscow. I went to Gorkin; I went

to Kiev;

I

went

Odessa.

was there 2 or

guards, but

I

3

weeks, and

it is

possible that

I

was surrounded by armed

did not see them.

Mr. Fulton:

I

am

saying to you as an observer

who

has been there since

have possibly changed since you have seen it? Dr. Du BoiS: It might have. I cannot say that. Mr. FultoN: Thank you for your point of view. We appreciate it. Chairman KeE: Are you a citizen of the United States? for Dr. Du BoiS: My family has been represented as United States citizens seven generations. I had a great grandfather who fought to make you people

the war, could

it

from Great Britain but he did not succeed. Mr. FultoN: I have heard it the other way around, that Great Britain should declare her independence from us. Chairman KeE: Don’t you think yon should have a few of your family fight

free

make our country safe from Russia? Chairman KeE; We are happy to have with our good friend, Hon. John M. Costello. Mr.

to

767

us today our former colleague, Costello, you

may

proceed.

Russophobia

I

have lived

whieh

to see the era of peaee,

I

was trained

to look

forward to as

the only goal of eivilization, transfornned into plans for universal world war: a

more

theory of progress by war and

than the

last.

I

now realize

that

as well as you,

I,

consideration of ease or age suffices to hold

and past experience

to bring reason

more savage and

war, eaeh

destructive

am facing a crisis in which no

me back from a great duty — to try

to bear

upon

group of people gone

a

temporarily insane.

The

basic cause of this insanity

and

control of press

money,

to

is

the effort of powerful interests,

armed by

and platform, backed by almost unlimited turn the attention of the world from the fundamental problem of radio, school

our age.

That problem

is

that in our unprecedented organization of industry, with

its

marvelous technique and world-wide extent, the vast majority of mankind remain sick, ignorant and starved while a few have more income in goods and services

than they can

This

the basic problem of our culture, no matter

is

conceal and ignore ourselves that the

use.

it.

We may

problem of

be led

how much we

our heads off

to yell

world today

to

try to

convince

Union and communism. That is deliberate deception. The problem of economic justice to working men existed before the Russian revolution and would remain if this

is

the Soviet

Russia were swept from the face of the earth tomorrow.

Proposals to solve this problem by socialism and originate in Russia solve this

problem

bequeathed

to the

insoluble; that

most From

and

not end there.

What

in a systematic way, at a

world the

most

men were

will

dogma

men must

that the

time

communism

did not

Russia did was to attempt to

when

the 19 th century had

problem of economic

justice

was

always be poor, ignorant and sick, because

so inferior in gift

and morals

the National Guardian, October 4, 1950.

768

that this was inevitable; that

Russophobia

depended on making tlie few masters of the many, tlie Rich the of the Poor, and thus in this way, and only in this way, could civilization

civilization

rulers

be built and maintained.

Is this

Whether

true?

it is

true or not,

we have no

right to stop people

and

nations from denying the necessity of poverty, disease and ignorance, and from experimenting in their own way to make a better world. Moreover, our

own

clear duty

not to pull

is

down

others but rather to build ourselves up; to

prove to the world that the economic condition of mankind can be bettered, that we know how to do this and propose to prove our belief by action. Instead of this, what are

make

going to

and

Wliy?

to?

We

are trying to fight an Idea.

nations agree with us and our

planes, battleships

jet

we up

and

China and to throw the world

are

way of life by using atom bombs

artillery.

propose to make the Russian experiment

Why do we

We

into continuous war?

The reason

fail, is

to throttle

clear:

we fear

any success of socialism or communism will interfere with our moneymaking. We have become a nation of money-makers. We think that money-

that

making

is

end of man. Our whole ideology bows to this fantastic idea. art and morals in America tend to be measured by the profit

the great

Religion, science,

they bring,

and

making business

manhood

the true vocation of American

is

regarded as profit-

enterprise.

Big Business and a business immensely profitable to a few, but of war measureless disaster and death of dreams to the many. Big business wants

War

is

in order to

keep your mind

off social reform;

it

would

rather spend your taxes

makes more money; it would rather have your sons dying in Korea than studying in America and awkward cjuestions. The system which it adv'ocates depends on war and

for

atom bombs than

for schools

because

in this

way

it

asking

more

war.

must have Hate; so its press and all who newspapers ask you to hate communists and if not communists, hate from those do not hate communists; indeed hate all who do not take orders In order to have war. Big Business

who now rule America. What has happened to cially in the

United

States,

the world

is

that those

who

profit

from war, espe-

have gained control of government, of information

whieh we and propaganda. This came about because of the First World War, materials at entered with reluctance and participated in mainly by furnishing was twofold: Ameriw'orld’s disaster and to cans conceived the idea of continuing to profit from the mankind. On successor of the British Empire as ruler of most of

a

huge

move

profit to those

who

controlled them.

The

result

in as

the other hand, Russia and other nations

769

who had been

through hell because

The Cold War

of war began experiments for reforming,

if

not replacing, the current methods

of industrial organization.

We

joined the capitalists of the world to suppress their socialist experiments

which threatened our plan of world industrial empire. However, just as plans were ripe for a mass attack, in particular on the Soviets, the bottom fell out of

modern

This was no

capitalist industry.

was directly due

to the

But no matter what

overreaching greed of private

remedies

nor of socialism, but

profits.

cause, the result was that the Soviet experiment got a

its

breathing space while in the U.S. the socialist

fault of Russia

New

Deal was forced

unemployment and

for poverty,

disease.

to

adopt

We

many

curbed the

we put the state into certain industries and adopted planned the TVA; we relieved the unemployed, and we established Social

profits of capital;

industry like Security.

In other words, the U.S.

began

to

form and carry out

reorganizing industry as to save capitalism wherever

Here the American Labor Party takes Deal.

It

its

it

out as

it

will.

own

plans for so

deserved to be saved.

stand as the successor of the

maintains that the Soviet Union has a right

philosophy and carry

it

its

And

to

adopt

its

New

own economic

that also the U.S. has a right to

own way of life and that this can be done as the New Deal started to prove, when it was sabotaged not only by its enemies but more completely by its friends. What the American Labor Party asserts is that the attempt to save

its

present plan of Big Business to compel the world to adopt our philosophy

our methods by force of arms is not only unreasonable but impossible in itself and can only end in disaster.

in the light

and

of our failures,

would seem that the futile efforts of a succession of “master races” to impose their will and power upon mankind would teach us that our program It

of world conquest

what Egypt,

is

Persia,

crazy.

There

is

no possible chance

for us to

accomplish

Greece, Rome, Great Britain and Hitler failed

military plans are idiotic

and

still

more

Japan to pull our chestnuts out of the of Tokyo to bring this fantasy to

fire.

to do.

Our

we depend on Germany and It will take more than one wild man so

if

fact.

Moreover, we point out that the persons

who are forcing us to adopt this policy

offeree and violence are the upholders of Big Business; and they are profiting as never before by war and preparation for war, and are deliberately blind to the fact that their profit

the disaster of America

and the world. Herbert Lehman was trained in Big Business and today deliberately represents its interests. Last year he called John Foster Dulles “a bigot, an antiSemite and a fascist.” This year he welcomes Dulles into “bi-partisan” collabis

770

Russophobia

oration for war; sponsors legislation for concentration

camps for Communists to power in Germany of

and those called Communists; ignores the restoration the same gang which killed 6,000,000 Jews, and acquiesces Wliy?

What

Lehman? He

has changed Mr.

has not changed.

automatically his training in the same school which ger and attorney of the Nazis, and that capital, so as to

make enormous

Asia and Africa.

American

is,

made

is

He

follows

Dulles a warmon-

foreign investment of

profit out of the poverty

capital

to their re-arming.

American

and helplessness of

pouring into South Africa and Rhodesia.

We are the real owners of serf-labor in the Belgian Congo. We are wild to have Chinese factory hands at 12?! a day. We helped shoot down the black miners in

West Africa. And

power of business

to

bulwark our investment and guarantee high

joins

hands with the

profit,

the

military.

Thus, we are today ruled by Big Business and Big Brass for profit. A representative of the Steel Trust has been Secretary of State; a representative of

Morgan and Rockefeller is chief adviser of Truman on foreign affairs; another Morgan man has been Under-secretary of State and will be second in command under Marshall. A Secretary of the Navy and Defense chief represented Dillon, Read and Company, and another became Secretary of War.

Where Big

Business does not control government,

men

trained for war do.

We have just reformed our defense department by placing a soldier at its head in defiance of

sound

tradition; his first

children for all-out war

all

word

is

universal training of our

over the earth, at a cost greater than

we

ever spent

education, health, housing and social uplift altogether. And for what? For a profit to investors which is today piling up at the rate of $23,000,000,000

for

year; with the prospect that the profit for

of 1939, and twice as high as the

It is

1950

enormous

will

be four and

a half times that

profit of 1944.

the theory of democratic government that

when

a situation like this arises,

examine, debate and dispute issues and acts until the people can make intelligent choice of the problems before them.

two

political parties will

Today we have only one political party which shares power for the same the Demoends. Men like Dewey and Hanley can only try to outdo what are for more war, crats have already done; if the Democrats are for war, they the Republicans loathe and if the Democrats repudiate the New Deal, despise

it.

The one point of agreement between the two so-called parties is war on any suppresnation or movement which stands in the way of American profit; and sion of

all

discussion of the merits of the present

crisis.

I

try to

spread in

with America news of the peace movement in Europe and I am threatened are to fight against people who jail. Paul Robeson advises Negroes never

771

The Cold War

striving for a better

make

world

for

black and white, and he

denied the right to

a living.

In this situation the

American Labor

Party takes

'There can be no progress without peace.” civilized

we

is

its

We

stand on the proposition,

are the only nation in the

world advocating war and compelling other nations

and

are hated

feared.

We

call for the

South

damned war

in conference,

only solution.

We

in all

this

immediate settlement of the war

Korea, which an American soldier has characterized

saw such a useless

For

to fight.

when he

said, “I

my life.” Mediation with both

and China represented

ask resumption of the free flow of trade

west and the utter overthrow of colonialism even

never

North and

United Nations,

in the

in

between

is

east

when masked under

the

and

Point

Four.

To

stop this

program of reason and progress, the

and associated profit-makers, called the Republican and Democratic parties, have

political

adopted the

last tactics

rights a casualty of war.

peace

to hate

and

fear.

of despair.

allied

They have made not only

truth but civil

They have turned your attention from progress and They are making it illegal to think of progress or to

advocate peace or progress. Every path to reform like taxation of great wealth;

development and forest planning, are all called and their promoters threatened with disgrace, jail

effective rent control; river

communistic or

socialistic

or loss of livelihood.

And now bill

as a last exercise of tyranny,

we

— the Fugitive Slave Law of 1950. You know what the

of 1850 was: capital invested in

human

northerners, black and white, helped

nation as Wall Street rules

it

any Negro possible without

it

beings began to run away; foolish hide.

The

that

made

a

man

of forcing masters to prove property; and tried to

was abolished three years

So today, we are bidden war;

we

and not

make

we

of

it

anti-slavery opinion a

brought Civil

War and

later.

communism when what we must when we try to think and act as human

to hate

are called subversive as puppets. If

made kidnaping

prove his freedom instead

crime. This law was so successful that in a decade slavery

Slave Power ruled the

today; they passed a bill that

trial,

McCarran Fugitive Slave Law

are presented with the

attack segregation in the

called traitors to America. Against this the fights.

772

army

or civil

American Labor

life,

hate

is

beings

we

Party protests

are

and

The Marshall Plan

and they ought to be. It came help the into being masquerading as an attempt on the part of America to hungr)^ and naked of the world. It never was that and was never intended to be

Many people

are puzzled by the Marshall Plan

scheme by which the taxpayers of the United of Western Europe enough funds to purchase certain

that. It

States.

is

a

A

committee of business

America, have purchase.

men

States furnish nations

things in the United

representing the great corporations of

matter in charge and decides what these countries can restrict their purchases to those things which will give the

this

They

United States and refuse to let them import many things which would help reorganization of their fundamental economy. Moreover, profits go m the merchants in the United States have raised prices so that the

greatest profit to the

have charged enormous prices on compelled transportation on American ships which must be used. They have which the foreign nations in many cases to buy surplus stocks of commodities

larger proportion to these merchants; they

United States wanted

to get rid of.

Recovery in Europe was beginning and

since that succeeding enormously before the Marshall Plan came into action, is today reaching a crisis. We are making it has gone forward but slowly and

making Italy Prance buy Coca-Cola, we are making Austria buy trucks, we are funda buy spaghetti. We are not trying or succeeding in re-establishing the mental economic prosperity of Europe.

We are trying to control and organize

make Europe and the world a quasi-colony of money to United States business. Also while we are ostensibly furnishing Europe to spend rehabilitate the industry of Europe, we are trying to compel much of the money in arming themselves for a new war.

European economy so

From

as to

the Chicago Globe, June 10, 1950.

773

The

I

have faced during

Trial

my life many unpleasant experiences:

mob;

the growl of a

the personal threat of murder; the scowling distaste of an audience. But

me as that day, November 8,

nothing has so cowed

1951,

when

1

took

my seat

Washington courtroom as an indicted criminal. 1 was not a criminal. 1 had broken no law, consciously or unwittingly. Yet 1 sat with four other American in a

citizens of

meanor,

in

unblemished character, never before accused even of misdethe seats often occupied by murderers, forgers and thieves; ac-

cused of a felony and liable

to

be sentenced before leaving

years of imprisonment, a fine of $10,000

and

loss

rights as a citizen, representing five generations of It

rail

was

a well-furnished

were tables

room, not

for the lawyers,

of

and back of

civil

court to five

and

political

Americans.

and poorly

large,

my

this

ventilated.

Within the

these, seats for the defendants,

with their backs to the audience behind. In front, on a low platform, sat the clerks

and court stenographer; and behind,

announced by the marshal — “God

judge,

to a dais,

came

the black-gowned

save the United States of

Amer-

ica!

On

either side

chosen

now

to declare

filled

were our

seats for the jurors, guilt, or

from

innocence, or a

whom

twelve would soon be

mistrial. All these seats

were

with the jury panel, and an unusually large panel overflowed into

the seats usually occupied by the public. present;

drawn.

The

There must have been 200 persons white and colored, from which juries for several cases would be

Our

first

worry was

this

matter of the

jury.

jury system in the United States has fallen

English concept of a

man s

guilt

on

fails.

From

In Battle for Peace:

old facts

Juries are selected in devious

ways and by secret manipulation. Most Negroes are sent “blue-ribbon” people

The

being decided by presentation of the

before twelve of his fellow citizens too often

hate or despise them.

evil days.

to jail

by persons

who

Many ordinary workers are found guilty by well-to-do who have no conception of the problems that face the

The Story of My 83rd Birthday, with Comment by Shirley Graham

774

(

1952).

The

Trial

poor. Juries are too often filled with professional jurors selected and chosen by

the prosecution and expected to convict.

Onr first hurdle was a long examination of the panel anent their affiliations, opinions and prejudices. The prosecution asked, among other things, if they had any prejudice against convicting a person of advanced years, d’he defendants asked a long series of more searching questions as to the prospective juror’s attitude toward color, discrimination, and membership in certain organizations.

One woman

admitted that she was formerly a

member

of the

K.K.K. and was excused.

No

one on the panel admitted

he had

that

at

any time advocated segrega-

tion of the races, or racial discrimination in housing, transportation, employ-

ment, recreation, education; or in the use of places of public accommodation me hardly in the District of Columbia. Looking at the persons, this seemed to believable. Probably most of the whites had belonged to some such organiza-

would not now admit it. They were asked about their attitude tow^ard the House Committee on Un-American Activities, but none admitted prejudeclared dice. A number said that they had relatives in the armed forces, but would be that if they were convinced of the defendants’ innocence they

tions but

willing to say so even In our case there

if

a majority of the jury disagreed with

came another angle — the

them.

colored juror. In

many

parts

District of of the nation, Negroes seldom or never serve on juries. But in the

Columbia,

lately,

so that there has

many Negro jurors drawn, so much movement to curb their choice. Something

continually there are

been

a distinct

of this was heard by the lawyers

m

our case, and they were prepared

to fight

of But on the other hand, we sensed another and more hurtful method government opposition. There is a considerable proportion of Negroes in it.

employ:

in the post office, as teachers

m

the public schools, as

servants

civil

well as dozens of branches. All such employees in Washington, white as w here often the black, are m fear of attack by witch hunts and loyalty tests, Also, they are accused have no chance to know' or answer their accusers. Negroes suffer espefaced w'ith severe competition and political influence. in

cially,

because tbeir chance

and because

for

employment outside government

their political influence

discrimination which makes even pose, then, a for this jury;

is

curtailed;

and

civil service rules

finally

is

narrow',

because of race

bow' to prejudice. Sup-

Negro with a government job and a home and family is drawn no matter what the facts show, how will he vote? How will he

dare to vote?

These

facts

faced us and one solution was to

try to

exclude gox’ernment

he had the employees from the panel. I his the judge offered to do, and « erc excluded panel polled. The poll showed that if government employees practically

no Negroes would be

left,

775

since

employment

for

educated

The Cold War

Negroes

in the District of

We

Columbia

is

government

practically confined to

we excluded government employees, we indirectly helped draw the color line; if we accepted government employees, more Negroes would face a greater risk of dismissal on trumped up charges than the whites. The white non-government worker would usually service.

faced a perfect dilemma:

if

be in a job which did not employ Negroes, which would

mean

that

he had

had no contact with them and would be prejudiced. The lawyers consulted, and then Marcantonio came over and put this dilemma squarely before me. “Accept government employees!”

I

answered.

We did, and to my amazement got a jury of eight Negroes and four whites! know whether to be glad

did not

and

jury panel fairly well,

with stooges.

looked

so.

“No

added

it

The prosecution usually knows the thought that the panel may often be sprinkled

it is

or scared.

owned? As I some were, I did

possible that these eight Negroes might be

at their intelligent faces, veiled

not think said:

Was

and non-committal

as

My impulse was to follow the conclusion of Earl

eight

I

American Negroes

will ever agree to convict you!”

reflectively, “If they do, Fll

practice might be curtailed. Yet

Negroes believed that

I

was

I

never defend another!”

could not believe that

who Then he

Dickerson,

I

was

afraid his

many American

a paid spy.

importance came the problem of the judge who would preside. Judge Holtzoff, who had charge over our preliminary hearing in May, made a

Next

in

bad impression: pompous and opinionated; fond of talking about himself. He plainly disliked New York lawyers, and had a low opinion of women. On one occasion he

send

me

summoned me

to the bar, threatened to

cancel

my bond

and

because of printed publicity found in the courtroom. Abbott Simon immediately stepped forward and took the blame for what was at worst to jail

an unintentional mistake, and more probably an attempt to frame us by some smart newspaper men. The judge finally dismissed us with a sharp warning against such “tirades” in his courtroom.

When, our case,

therefore, I

I

heard that Judge McGuire had

was elated,

until

finally

heard that he was rumored

I

been assigned to

to

be the most

reactionary judge on the District bench, and worse than Holtzoff! His appear-

ance, however, was reassuring.

He was from

first

to last,

courteous and

intel-

He did not put on judicial airs; he never lost his temper; he was firm but kindly. Had it not been for the nature of our indictment and the impossibility' of ligent.

McGuire with that of the Department of Justice, through whose employment he had risen to the bench, I would call Judge James McGuire a great jurist, who in this case held the scales of justice reconciling the attitude of Judge

absolutely level.

But last

my considered opinion

moment

is

that

what happened was

that this judge at the

freed himself from the political pressures of the day to

776

which so

The

that both

many had succumbed and

our opinions and

Communists,

he and the Department of State realized

were fixed on

that the eyes of the world

In strictly legal aspect,

Trial

this case.

remember what this trial

beliefs;

was:

it

was not a question of

involved no question as to whether

it

Jehovah’s Witnesses or Nudists;

Socialists,

imputation of moral turpitude except in so

what foreigners are saying at the

far as

it is

it

a statutory

we were

involved no

crime

command of those foreigners. The

to say

judge

said:

“The point in this case is whether or not this organization acted as an agent or in a capacity similar to that for a foreign organization or foreign political

power, whether advocating peace, advocating this, or advocating that. They can advocate the distribution of wealth; they can advocate that all red-

headed

men

be

shot.

It

doesn’t

make any

difference

what they advocate.”

%

It

was not even

fully

admitted until the third week of the

government did not allege

trial

that the

Union was connected with the the indictment. It was never alleged that we had

that the Soviet

^Toreign principal” accused in

was only the question: were we “agents” of a to foreign principal? Yet and despite all this, the public was deliberately given understand by spokesmen of government and by the press that we were ac-

no

right to advocate peace.

It

cused of lying, spying, and treason in the pay of the Soviet Union. As one of the damned attendants said in the ante-room of the court, scowling at us: “If the Communists don’t like this country, why don’t they go back to Russia?

were

Jurisdictional questions

first

raised,

based on the fact that the organi-

and on the question of the jurisdiction of the court over court admitindividual defendants. These motions were denied, although the the officers of the ted that there was still some question as to the liability of Information Peace Information Center, if it were proven that the Peace

zation was defunct,

Center no longer

existed.

Marcantonio

said:

any manner, shape or form revive the died, and died dead. In other words, if John Jones were indicted and he and considbefore the indictment, certainly, he could not be found guilty

“The plea of not

guilty did not in

And pleading not ered in being simply because counsel pleaded not guilty. including the establishment guilty they pleaded not guilty for all purposes, of the non-existence of the individual.”

“The Court: You have leave

One country,

it

just said

what I have

said,

much better.

So,

we

will

that way.”

justice in this of the basic reasons for the repeated miscarriages of of the respectable public to the is tlie lack of attention on the part

777

The Cold War

Most persons assume that trials have to do with criminals, tricky lawyers, peremptory judges, and hard court officials. Such folk keep as far from courts as possible and let flagrant and cruel injustice escape without remark or attention. We knew this, and from the first appealed to our friends and the friends of justice everywhere to attend this trial and see what went on. As a result the sessions were crowded by a quiet, intelligent audience, who came from New York, New England, Chicago, the South and procedures of court

trials.

West, with usually a waiting line to be admitted. trial,

and the Department of Justice knew

The

jury having

been selected, the

and holidays.

A

fussy

little fat

was in every sense a public

it.

began Thursday, November

trial

lasted five days, during three weeks,

It

because of adjournments

first

count

states that the

porated organization, having

it

weekends

for the prosecution:

Peace Information Center was an unincor-

its

headquarters in

alleges that the Peace Information pal, in that

and

man, Maddrix, chief of the prosecution, and

former Attorney General of Maryland, stated the case

“The

for

8,

New York

It

further

Center was an agent of a foreign

princi-

acted as and held

City.

out as a publicity agent for the

itself

Committee of the World Congress of the Defenders of Peace, and the World Peace Council and because of it being an agent of a foreign .

principal,

it

.

was under a

.

liability to file a registration

Attorney General of the United States.

.

.

.

“The material disseminated within the United tion

Center

as publicity

agent for

its

statement with the

States by Peace Informa-

said foreign principal consisted of

information about peace, war, instruments of war, and the consequences of

peace and of war.

.

.

.

“The agency relationship of the Peace Information Center with the Committee of the World Congress of the Defenders of Peace and the World Peace Council

is

not claimed to have existed pursuant to contractual

relationship.”

Maddrix added

that the

government intended

to call twenty-seven wit-

nesses.

Our

lawyers postponed rejoinder, since the jury

seemed more bewildered elected to await the development

We of the government case before stating ours. We were puzzled by the fairness of than impressed by the

bill

of particulars.

the judge, and were awaiting the nature of the evidence tion

which the prosecucould produce. The prosecution reminded us that we had not named our

prospective witnesses, as was the practice in the District of Columbia.

determined

to

We had

confine ourselves to as few witnesses as possible and to rely on

778

The

Trial

the strength of our case rather than corroborative repetition.

I

had been

main witness, with two other witnesses to substantiate certain occurrences which took place during my absence in Europe. These were named; and then Marcantonio added that we might subpoena the Secretary of State and the Attorney-General. Later, when it seemed that might need

chosen

as the

1

character witnesses, Albert Einstein offered to do “Whatever he could.”

wTat reactions took place in government circles concerning this indictment. At first, certainly, the government meant to scare us by the “Communist” bogey. Then by threatening indictment they aimed to

We may never know

just

cut off contributions to the Peace Information Center, or make us try to escape persecution. When we began to fight back and the volume of protest

and from Europe and Asia as well as y\frica, the government began frantically to collect evidence which they had never possessed. They sent out agents. They interviewed and tried to intimidate

from white and black

arose,

every person connected in any

way with the founding of the Peace Informa-

tion Center. ...

Whatever design there was to confront us with manufactured testimony from professional spies, liars and agents-provocateurs, it was abandoned. But ever was the very fairness of the trial raised the query as to why the government induced to bring this case on so flimsy a basis? They had no case and they Their only hope of success was to raise national hysteria against us to could the flaming point. This our campaign rendered impossible. No ex-spy Kremlin with a get away with testimony about seeing me emerge from the

knew

it.

underbag of gold; no stooge could make black America believe that I was an truth on all cover conspirator, when for fifty years I had always blurted out the occasions.

and courteous. The prosecution was inept if knew law and not stupid. The defense was prepared to the last comma; it possible appeal procedure; it was on its toes every minute with its eyes on the time and money on proving to higher courts. The government spent precious had a bank obvious; that the Peace Information Center existed; that it

The

judge continued to be

fair

the

account; that

it

rented offices; that

men and newspaper reporters gotten at any time, and which

it

distributed literature. Cautious F.B.I.

introduced literature which anyone could have

we

we had

freely admitted

written

and

distrib-

uted.

The

the chief dependence of the prosecution was on John Rogge. Rogge place caricature of Rogge the crusader for Peace and Reform. In

witness was a

of the erect, self-confident clothes

hung

loosely

ducted

many

cases,

voluntarily stood

up

if

on him, and who had to

in a

difficulty locating

help

worn man, whose courtroom where he had con-

not arrogant leader,

him

out.

779

me

came

a

in the defendants’ chairs.

I

The Cold War

He

admitted his membership

in the

Peace Information Center.

World Peace Congress; and declared

ted his attendance at the

objective was not peace, but that

it

was an agency

He

that

its

admitactual

for the foreign policy of the

Soviet Union.

Mr. Maddrix

in his

opening said that the government did not intend

to

show and would not show that there was any contract of agency between the World Congress of the Defenders of Peace and the Peace Information Center. The Court said: “The responsibility of the government is to prove beyond a reasonable doubt, first of all, the nexus; and in doing that, you will have to establish, of course, that there was a foreign group, whether that group takes the aspect of a foreign political party, a foreign

purview of the It

bers

was

statute.”.

at this

and went

.

government or a foreign association within the

.

juncture that Judge

McCuire

called the lawyers to his

straight to the kernel of Rogge’s testimony.

Rogge had

cham-

said that

the object of the Defenders of Peace was ostensibly peace, but really to carry

we suspected from the Rogge testimony, and the method by

out the policies of the Soviet Union. This was, as beginning, the whole intention of the

which the government hoped

Communist

to

put us in

jail. If,

by this testimony, Russian and

controversy could be smeared across the case, current popular

hysteria could be aroused against us. Witnesses like

J.

B.

Matthews, long the

propagandist of the Dies Committee, could be brought on the stand with his lurid stories

about Communists, corroborated by the

and

its

Budenzes

straight to the point; referring to

Rogge he

F.B.I.

and Bentleys.

The

judge, therefore,

came

said:

“This witness was permitted to state that while the stated purpose was peace, the real purpose was to promote the foreign policy of the Soviet

Union.

“Do you expect to show

that the

World Council

for

Peace was in

fact

an

agent of another principal, namely the Soviet Union?”

Mr. Maddrix did not answer that

he

tion

was going

pal,

and

let in

show

to

that the

tell

but the judge continued, saying

Union because he thought the prosecuthe Soviet Union actually was the foreign princi-

reference to the Soviet

activity of the

going to

this directly,

that

World Council

for

Peace was merely the conduit

Peace Information Center.

If this

to use the

was not their case, he was

the jury to disregard any reference to the Soviet Union. Mr.

Maddrix objected

to

being restricted, but the Court insisted:

780

The

‘Tou cannot blow hot and cold. expect to show.

.

.

.

You

are not,

I

I

Trial

have got take

it,

to

be advised now

as to

what you

predicating your case or the theory

of your case on the ground that the World Council for Peace was, in effect, the agent of the Soviet Union?”

Mr. Maddrix: “We are not making that statement, no.” The Court: “What you do not intend to prove, and I am so advised now,

you are not going to attempt to prove formally that the activities of the World Council for Peace were the activities of the Soviet Union?” We do not intend to Mr. Maddrix: “I could not state it any better is

that

show

that the

Committee of the Congress of the World Defenders of Peace

was an agent of the Soviet Union.”

As a result of this admission the Court

“I

thought

I

ought

to

be advised

Government expected to show with

said:

at this

juncture just exactly what the

reference to the Soviet

Union being the

principal or the so-called principal of the Peace Information Center.

I

understand the Government expects not to show, under any circumstances, concerned the existence of another principal behind the principal we are here of with, namely, the Soviet Union. If that is not my understanding

what transpired

The

at the

bench,

I

would

like to

be so advised.

prosecution then again admitted:

not charge in our indictment that the foreign principal in any way between the involves an element of agency as I understand this case,

“We do

foreign principal, the

Committee of the World Congress, and the

Soviet

Union.”

The

Court: ‘Tou have answered

my

question.

the only foreign principal involved in this case

is

You the

are contending that

World Congress

for

Peace?”

Mr. Cunningham: “Absolutely.” The Court: “I am not going to try the Soviet Union or make any comAmerica. I am parison between the Soviet Union with respect to peace and going to stick to the issue.”

With the

jury out of the

room, there was

a

conference of the judge and

lawyers concerning other points in Rogge’s testimony.

Rogge had

said that the

the world on purpose of the Stockholm Appeal was to concentrate the eyes of to take the eyes of the atom bomb in the possession of the United States, and come from the East. the world off any aggression that might and which did

781

The Cold War

The Court asked Mr. Maddrix no, blit

no one was

tliat

if

he considered Mr. Rogge an expert.

going on and to answer

am

said

know what was

He was a member of the meetings. The Court then said:

this particular question.

policy-making group, and had attended

“I

than Mr. Rogge to

in a better position

He

its

not trying any propaganda lines.

I

am

not trying any foreign policy

You have a ver)' simple case here. You charged this Peace Information Center and these individuals, as officers and directors, as being agent of a foreign principal, and disseminating propaganda in the United States. You have got to show a tieup between the principal so-called and the so-called agent. If you don’t do questions involving any country^, including our own.

that,

you are out of court.”

The

prosecution insisted that the agency of the Peace Information Center

was going

to

be proved by circumstantial evidence.

The

judge

said:

Timbuctoo and you may shaving and using Gillette be in some place in South America. I brushless shaving cream and you may be doing the same thing, but there is no connection except we are both using Gillette.” “You have

to

show the connection.

Thereupon, when the that

when Rogge was on

Council

for

jury

...

may be may be

the stand he was asked what the purpose of the

Peace was, and he answered.

emphasis

to

in

had returned, the judge addressed them, saying

“You are now instructed by the Court, that lend

I

what

I

as

say, that

The

World

judge went on:

emphatically as

you are

I

can make words

to disregard

Mr. Rogge’s

opinion of what he thought the purpose of the Stockholm Peace Appeal was.

It is

a very

simple rule of evidence that excludes that

because opinion

excluded, and the only opinion that

is

introduced in a court of law, in certain circumstances, expert. So, therefore,

you

is

is

t)^pe

of opinion,

permitted to be

the opinion of an

will disregard entirely the characterization

of the

witness Rogge with reference to what he thought the World Council for

Peace had

in view.”

Although we did not

at the

time realize

it,

and

still

watched narrowly

for

trumped up testimony, it was right here that we won our case. The prosecution had rested its whole case on Rogge’s testimony that we were representing the Soviet

Union through the Defenders of Peace organization

had naturally not an

iota of real

public opinion. But Rogge’s

in Paris.

They

proof of this, but they planned to depend on

own testimony convicted him. He was

782

a

member

The

Trial

of the Peace Information Center; he was a

member

of the policy-making

bureau of the Defenders of Peace. He had visited the Soviet Union and spoken as a representative of the Defenders of Peace and the Peace Informa-

He had sworn on oath when he himself became an that he was not a member of any other foreign agency.

tion Center.

Yugoslavia

Then,

.

too,

we had

agent of .

.

the sworn testimony of the executive secretary of the

World Defenders of Peace, accused of being our “foreign principal.” At considerable cost we had sent three of our lawyers to Paris in July. The government also sent three of their representatives, including the head of the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice, to take depositions from Jean Laffitte, the Secretary of the World Defenders of Peace. At this interesting inquiry, held at the offices of the United States Embassy, sworn testimony was

which we were ready to introduce but never got the opportunity. Mr. Laffitte, a man of training and manners, member of the Legion of Honor, declared that the Committee of which he was Secretary Ceneral was

taken,

“.

.

.

instituted

definite task

World Congress of the Defenders of Peace. Its circulate and make known the information given and

by the

was

to

First

the decisions taken by the Congress.

It

was

also in charge of circulating the

on behalf of Peaee throughout denounce all propaganda which predisposed

various information concerning aetivities

the world.

Its

task

was

also to

public opinion in favor of war and to support

had the duty of encouraging all

peace.

It

And

was

it

in

all initiatives

tending towards

cultural activities in favor of peace.

charge of preparing a further World Congress of Peace.

he had ever heard of the Peace Information Center and if that he the Center had authority to act as publicity agent. He answered had heard of the Peace Information Center, but that it had never had such Information authority; that the Committee had not appointed the Peace

He was

Center

as

asked

its

if

agent for the circulation of the Stockholm Appeal, nor had the

Peace Information Center asked

to act as publicity agent; that

funds belonging to the Committee, and had no authority to that

it

made no

reports orally or in writing to this

it

expended no

make

contracts,

Committee.

then asked about national committees which were in co-operation in about with the World Committee. He said there were such committees said that his eighty countries, but that there was none in the United States. He

He was

committee had co-operated with the Peace Information Center

in a very-

simple way: United of the formation of an Information Center in tlie information relating to the States which had assumed the task of circulating

“We had heard

783

The Cold War

furtherance of peace. This naturally resulted in our sending the Center

information concerning peace movements, and allowed us to hope that in

way such information would become more widely known than other matter which we sent to the United States."

this

Then came an

interesting colloquy. Mr. Laffitte was asked,

Soviet Russia as the strongest advocate for peace

immediately objected

attorney

Laffittes

to

“Do you

regard

among governments?" Mr. Mr.

answering.

clients

his

Mclnerney, head of the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice of the United

States,

demurred and

he was unable

said that

to

understand

Laffitte 's

“reluctance to express a viewpoint which he has proclaimed to the world." Mr. Laffitte ’s attorney replied that his client

had made

a point of

answering

all

questions which were closely or remotely related to this matter, but that there

was no obligation on he were called

“If

were asked

to

answer

his part to

French court, and

to testify before a

what

political party

concerning a given problem

(a

as to his personal

free as to his opinions; a

if

inconceivably he

he belonged or what was

his belief

thing which could never happen),

him not to answer such a question, since he

urge

opinions and beliefs:

is

a

I

would

French citizen entirely

freedom guaranteed by the Constitution of

his

country."

Mr. Mclnerney, taken aback, and probably remembering the Constitution

own

of his

country, replied,

He was

Du

not,

Laffitte

I

have intruded upon his

law."

was further asked

asked

if

if

he had been

in direct

communica-

Bois was present in Paris at the Peace Congress.

and

that the Paris

Committee

He was

then asked

Bois,

and he

replied:

told

you that

called, with Dr.

I

if

had not had any personal correspondence, properly

Du

Bois.

We

confined ourselves

we

transmit without distinction to

that

is

a

to

to say, the Secretariat

— always

was

Du

so-

information which

members of the World Committee; regularly sends all members of the World all

the different meetings of the Bureau

or the decisions taken at such meetings, arise therefrom,

it

sending Professor Dr.

member of the World Committee, the

Committee information concerning

may

replied that

he had had personal correspondence with Dr.

Bois,

is

He

did not hear of its organization until a year

Du

who

not.

the Peace Information Center was organized at the time that

later.

“I

if

any time with the Peace Information Center, he said that he had

tion at

Dr.

Mr.

wish to apologize

under French

constitutional rights

When

“I

and

also

any publications which

with a covering letter which

we send

matter of courtesy and a mark of respect for these personalities."

784

as a

The

Trial

denied that he had ever requested the Peace Information Center to disseminate the Stockholm Appeal as an agent of the Committee. This

He

interesting testimony

The

we were

given no chance to introduce.

prosecution had rested before the morning session was finished.

We

prepared during the remainder of the morning to present certain motions, and then if they were denied, to go into our defense, introducing the Paris depositions, then character witnesses for stand.

I

was ready.

785

me,

after

which

I

would take the

My Campaign

As

I

started

home from Prague

in August, 1950,

the United States, both important.

One

Party, asking if

1

received two messages from

was from John Abt of the American

would run for United The other was from Abbott Simon, executive Labor

Senator

for

I

States Senator

from

New York.

secretary of the Peace Informa-

me that the Department of Justice had demanded our

tion Center, informing

registration as “agents of a foreign principal.”

Arriving in Paris on August

2,

hastened to

I

my

favorite little hotel

on the

Rive Gauche, only a block from the beautiful flowers, sculpture and children of the

Luxembourg

he asked I

my

gardens. As soon as

decision on his proposal.

laughed because

when

I

I

I

I

was

such a reputation could add

grilling

Czechoslovakia.

visit

I

was amused

over the long distance telephone

is

remind Abt of my age and

inexperience and

political

telephoned to Abt and

by the State Department

any campaign; then

to

I

laughed.

remembered my

asked for a passport to

settled

I

to think

what

recalled that laughter

as costly as words,

and

I

proceeded

to

my unwillingness to run

for public office.

But Abt said a number of things, of which two sunk

campaign would

afford a

chance

for

me

to

in;

(1)

That

this

speak for peace which could be

voiced in no other way. (2)

My candidacy would

Marcantonio.

matter over gravely. Because of my support of the

I

thought

this

Progressive Party in 1948,

my

help the campaign of Vito

acceptance of an honorary and unpaid office

with Paul Robeson in the Council on African Affairs, and

Congresses in

New

York, Paris and

Moscow,

proscribed in pulpit, school and platform. tion

if a

series of plain talks in a political

only chance to

Beyond

this,

tell

the truth as

of all

In Battle for Peace:

members

I

saw

Peace

found myself increasingly

My opportunity to write for publica-

was becoming narrower and narrower, even

dered

From

I

my activity in

Negro press. I woncampaign would not be my last and in the

it.

of Congress, Vito Marcantonio has acted with

The Story of My 83rd Birthday, with Comment by Shirley Graham (1952).

786

My Campaign for Senator courage, intelligence and steadfast integrity in the face of ridicule,

mud-

and cheating. Liberals like Graham, Pepper and Douglas have wavered, backed and filled and deserted their principles; the colored members of the House have generally been silent or absent. If I could do anything for Marcantonio, I decided to try. On August 31,1 wired, “Accept. Du Bois.” slinging

Of

course, whatever contribution

and not very effective.

I

could make would,

I

knew, be small

did not have the strength for a hard, active campaign;

I

I

was no orator or spell-binder, but only one who could reason with those who would listen and had brains enough to understand. I had no large group of

and many of those whom I had, dared not speak or act because of fear for their jobs — a fear which was real and restraining; finally, I had no money to spend or moneyed friends to contribute; and anyone who thinks that money does not buy American elections is a fool. The matter of registering the Peace Information Center as a foreign agent I effort begun did not take too seriously. It was, I was sure, either a mistake or an and intimidate us. I cabled a statement to Simon, setting forth our work close personal friends,

to

suggested sending an attorney to Washington, and promised to go there what myself as soon as I could get passage home. Then I forgot it and turned to

aims.

I

seemed then the more

My experience reared in the

man

serious matter of

in practical politics

New England tradition

my

campaign.

had been small.

First of all

of regarding politics as no

fit

I

had been

career for a

college-bred man. of serious aims, and particularly unsuitable for a participation in political life as voter, thinker, writer and, on rare

Respectable

occasions as speaker, was

my

ideal.

This preoccupation was strengthened by

especially difficult. the fact that for Negroes entrance into political life was I was Spending as I did the first thirteen years of my active life in Georgia,

disfranchised on account of my race, to

my students and to writing. When came to New York I

and confined

in 1910,

my

my political work to advice

political activity

was exercised

it gained influthrough the Crisis magazine which I founded and edited. As voters. In 1912, ence and circulation, I began to give political advice to Negro to Woodrow Wilson for President and away I tried to swing the Negro vote

break our servitude to the Republican Party, and to Negro voters took my rebuke Taft for his “lily-white” Southern policies. Many Wilson surrendered in advice to their regret and my own embarrassment, as influence Theinstances to the Negro-hating South. Next I tried to

from

Taft, in order to

many

odore Roosevelt and the Bull Moose movement

main plank

in their platform. Roosevelt

to

make

would not

the Negro problem a

yield,

and preferred

alli-

this I remembered ance with the “progressive South,” which he lived to regret. made in Garnegie Hall, when he in 1919 as I introduced him to an audience

his last public speech.

787

The Cold War

From 1921

to 1933,

lynching and for

political fight against

my

with

under Harding, Coolidge and Hoover,

pushed the

and

civil rights in editorials

lectures,

only personal participation in politics the chance appointment as

special minister to Liberia,

and membership on the

sion to celebrate emancipaiion.

When

New York 1

1

Tammany, and began

I

knew

run of

had no personal fitness lean toward the Marxian view of politics because

partly to

I

state

commis-

Ferdinand Morton, colored leader of

Tammany and a man of extraordinary ability, suggested that on a Tammany ticket, refused flatly, partly on account career.

I

1

for

my

Congress dislike of

for a political as at

bottom

economics, and said so in the resolutions which for years 1 wrote for the annual meetings of the N.A.A.C.P. 1 strongly supported LaFollette in 1924.

With the depression and the reign of Roosevelt from 1933 to 1945, 1 embraced the “New Deal” in writing and lecturing and in socialist thinking; stressing the disabilities of the

Negro and

criticizing the failure adequately to

deal with them, but believing firmly in state planning for social welfare. At this juncture, in 1934,

Tower.

War came,

disaster of

returned to the South to teach and re-enter

1

my

Ivory

with Hitler, and Stalingrad, the United Nations and the

Truman.

I

New

returned to the N.A.A.C.R in

York

in 1944,

and

soon in frantic recoil from a program of war and economic reaction, I cast my political lot with Henry Wallace. This cost me dear, although I took no active part in the campaign of 1948. But I did lose my job indirectly because my political

thought was deemed too

During the next two years

I

radical.

worked with the Progressive Party

in

minor

had some influence in forming the Progressive Party platform for 1950, and I made the personal acquaintance of Henry Wallace. He was a kindly and warm-hearted man. He induced Anita McCormick roles,

without pay.

I

Blaine, his close friend, to help for a

time

it

seemed

I

came

that

I

me

out of financial difficulties in 1949,

would no longer be able

to

continue

when

my writing and

study.

But

as

to

know Henry Wallace,

intellectual orientation,

I

realized the uncertainty of his

and the strong forces close

to

him which wanted

and feared too close association with unpopular causes. In a sense Wallace lacked guts and had small stomach for martyrdom; and all this respectability'

despite his facing of Southern rotten eggs in

strengthen his

faith,

attention to the

way

when saw him wavering I

1948.

in 1950.

I

I

tried

wrote

gingerly to

him

to call his

which, a century before, respectable folk who disliked slavery recoiled from being classed with “Abolitionists,” because the word

connoted so

much

in

that

attitude today toward

was not respectable

“Communism.”

I

1950, Wallace deserted the Progressive

ungenerously both

to

at the time.

I

noted the same

received no reply, and on July 15,

movement. Thereafter, and perhaps him and the slender little animal who, after all, can

788

My Campaign for Senator

fight,

thought of Wallace

I

as

no longer the crusader, but

as

Wallace the

Weasel.

campaign for Senator knowing well from the first that I did not have a ghost of a chance for election, and that my efforts would bring me have a message ridicule at best and jail at worst. On the other hand, I did which was worth attention and which in the long run could not fail to have on the influence. The leaders of the American Labor Party and my colleagues I

went

into the

were more than kind and solicitous; they reduced my participation to a minimum, themselves bore an unfair part of the work, and gave me every help to keep my efforts within my strength and ability. I began with a delivered, in all, ten speeches and made seven broadcasts.

ticket

I

which the Times and Mcrcild Tribune sent paper was represented. I reporters, and the Associated Press; only one Negro the Bronx, each addressed mass meetings in Harlem, Queens, Brooklyn and and by 1,000 to 2,500 persons, who gave me careful attention

press conference in

Harlem,

to

attended

manuscript, no generous applause. This was encouraging because I used popular audiences for gestures, and few jokes. This method I have used before years,

am

and while an audience always

sighs at the sight of a roll of manuscript,

convinced that intelligent persons prefer

to

have a speaker

I

really say

and acting. My last something, rather than entertain them with shouting gathering of 17,000 speech in the city of New York was at that marvelous news of which was nearly persons at Madison Square Garden on October 24, blacked out by the press.

October 15,1 spoke an upstate tour from Buffalo to Albany beginning in small and rather obscure four times to audiences of a few hundred persons repression. “Free” Americans slipped halls. There was a distinct air of fear and many stories of how the industries of in almost furtively and whispered Albany political pressure Rochester and Syracuse threatened their workers. In evidently were permitted just to was tense. While the press was courteous, we

On

touch the edges of real publicity. much money and effort in halls, advertisement and I realized from this how over to the mass of voters. personal contacts was needed to get our message

were eager and enthusiastic. They But they and we were gripped by listened, leaning forward with rapt faces. Republican candidates, could defeatism. Tom Dewey and Joe Hanley, the hundred. Even if they said nothing, talk to ten thousands while we spoke to a

Once reached even

in small groups, they

the state. Senator which they often did, their message reached every end of hungry in order Lehman and his Democratic Party friends did not have to go collections for I winced at our little for him comfortably to cover the state.

McManus,

John meetings; they drew blood. My colleagues, like persona con ac night Frank Scheiner and George Murphy, spent day and

expenses

at

m

789

s

The Cold War

and conversation while workers where I

we had

I

slept with guilty conscience.

We

needed

a

hundred

one.

had another handicap and paradox. Of the

utter unfitness of

Hanley

for

public office, especially after his notorious letter revealing disreputable political bargaining came to light while I was in Albany, there was not the slightest

Lehman was

doubt.

behind him a

fairly

different.

He was

an honest

good record of public

man and

service. Yet

wealthy; he had

he ought not to

sit

in the

United States Senate because he represented finance and foreign investment, and because of this was frantically backing Truman in the Korean crime

which Big Business All that

precipitated.

my candidacy, however, could possibly accomplish, in the

ate present,

would be

to

draw enough votes from warmonger

immedi-

Lehman

him with a venal politician. Many voters were indignant prospect, and some accused me of being deliberately a catspaw or at replace

at this

best of

poor judgment. For a time the political leaders were worried over this; and angle gave me more publicity than any other. Yet,

I

am

sure,

was

I

right to persist,

and

that even the threat of

to

this

Hanley was

not worse than that of World War; and that overwhelming defeat today of my

peace and

would some day prove worth while. The ten speeches I made in this campaign were based on three themes, represented by my talk on "Peace and Civil Rights” at Madison Square Garden; my address on “The American Way of Life” at the Brooklyn and Queens rallies; and my lecture on “Harlem” at the Golden Gate Ballroom. All fight for

civil rights

my

other speeches were combinations and adaptations of these. For the seven broadcasts, I adopted another method: I planned a connected series of expositions on the underlying basis of the demand for peace

and

civil rights,

emphasizing

in succession the rule of

propaganda, the mis-

conception of property, and the concept of democracy. These were interlarded between two general statements, one delivered on television, and one in

our

final

My

main

symposium. thesis

was thus

summed

The most

sinister evil of this

inevitable

and

that there

is

day

no time

mass of Americans who accept tions are.

War

is

is

up:

the widespread conviction that war left for

discussion.

judgment

this

physical force exercised by

men so as to compel submission to the will to social progress.

But

included larger and larger masses of things have

become

realize just

doubtful

what

its

if

the

implica-

men and machines on

other

of the victors. Unquestionably in

primitive times there were repeated occasions

was the only path

It is

is

when such

recourse to force

as civilization has progressed

men and

and

portions of the earth, two

increasingly clear: one, that the costs of war have

790

My Campaign for Senator become

too great for any nation to pay no matter what the alternative; and

two, that in war as

now

modern world war

all

causes of

On

strife,

carried on, there can be

no victorious

contestants lose and not only lose the immediate

but cripple the fundamental bases of

the whole

enjoyed

I

party. In

this

human

unique excursion into

culture.

political activity.

I

open race prejudice, although of course few New Yorkers wanted to be represented in Washington by a Negro — because of their prejuthan American. To dice and also because they suspected I was more Negro such. I counteract this at least in part, I made no appeal to the Negro vote as encountered

little

the wanted the people of New York to know that as Senator I would represent minority group. At the same interests of the state and not merely those of one emancipation as a time I knew, and Negroes knew, that I would regard Negro was in a prime prerequisite to American freedom. The Negro voter of Harlem rights as I would; quandary; he knew that no candidate would defend Negro on Lehman or he also knew I would be defeated and that he must depend

Hanley. His path was cloudy.

was amazed and exasperated by the overwhelming use and corporations, not record and influence of money in politics. Millionaires and for one defeated Marcantonio. Dewey could afford to spend $35,000

Above

all,

I

logic,

mine the nation over sent $600 to further my millions spent on campaign, it represented more honesty and guts than all the the Lehman and Hanley. Small wonder the result of this election throughout

day on radio;

when

friends of

land sounded like a “tale told by an idiot. per cent voted for me Five million persons voted in this election; of these, 4 expected. More than a per cent in Harlem), which was far more than I (15

million of the voters stayed away from the polls. one must feel the After a great social effort like the election of 1950,

down. Even the was worth there

is

all

the

losers victors gain less than they wish, while the effort, all

a sense in

which no sound

high ideal and personal never be

lost;

the worry,

integrity.

all

if it

the breathless disappointed hope. Yet

effort

One

wonder

let-

is

in vain, least of all a struggle with

feels that, in the

end,

all

of this can

somehow, somewhere, whatever was fine and noble in this contempttriumph; and what was vicious and low will remain

that

campaign wiil ible, no matter what the returns may say. demaOf course I was disgusted at the re-election of an acknowledged of the Empire State gogue and opportunist like Thomas Dewey as governor

know I was insulted to and the continued threat of his elevation to presidency. man like Joe Hanley to be continued that hv'o million New Yorkers wanted a to Herbert Lehman go back to Washington in public office. I was sorry to see could not understand liow work to keep us in war and chains. But most of all I

791

The Cold War

a sane

and

could reward the brave, lone fight of Vito

intelligent electorate

Marcantonio with

defeat.

It

just did

not

make

sense.

But

plain cash to purchase the election of as reactionary

dollars did

it

— just

and characterless

a

nonentity as ever sat in Congress.

As

for myself,

having never expected anything but defeat

would not have been surprised if no more than 10,000 persons had voted for me. I was astonished by a vote of 205,729, a vote from men and women of courage, without the prejudice against color which I always expect and usually experience. This meant that these faced poverty and jail to stand and be counted for Peace and Civil Rights. For this I was happy. I had slapped no backs during the campaign which I had not slapped before;

I

had begged no

vote simply because

I

man

I

for his vote as a personal favor;

was black.

It

was a fine adventure. But

prelude to the most extraordinary experience of criminal.

792

my

life:

my

I

had asked no

it

proved only a

indictment as a

The Rosenbergs Ethel and Michael, Robert and ]ulius

day of sorrow and suffering. I was very, very about me, I sat down and weary. As the night fell and the silence of death rose heard my own voice speaking. lay my face in my hands and closed my eyes. I

It

was the end of a

long, dark day; a

Crucify us, Vengeance of

God

As we crucify two more Jews,

Hammer home Crush down the

the nails, thick through our skulls. thorns.

Rain the red bloody sweat Thick and heavy, warm and wet.

We We

are the murderers hurling

mud

the witchhunters, drinking blood

To us shriek five thousand blacks Lynched without trial And hundred thousands mobbed

The But

millions dead in useless war. this, this

awful deed

we do today

This senseless, blasphemy of birth Fills full

the cup!

Hail Hell and glory to Damnation!

O blood-stained nation. Stretch forth your hand! Grasp

it.

Judge

Wrap it in your blood-red gown; And Law}'er in your sheet of shame; Proud pardoners of petty thieves Cautious rabbis of

From Masses

6 Mainstream, 6

just

Jehovah,

(July 1953): 10-12.

793

The Cold War

And

silent priests of the piteous Christ;

Crawl wedded In the dirt of

And

liars,

all

hold high

hide from sight,

the night.

vigil at

the dawn!

For yonder, two pale and tight-lipped children Stagger across the world, bearing their dead

There

lifts

a light

upon the Sea

With grim color, crooked form and broken With thunderous throb and roll of drums Alleluia,

Now

lines;

Amen!

out beyond the plain

Streams the thick sunshine, sheet on sheet

Of billowing

light!

Above the world loom

Limned

vast

sombre

hills

in lurid lightings;

While from beneath the hideous sickened earth. The Sea rains up flood on flood to cleanse the heavens. Twixt Sun and Sea, Rises the Great Black Throne.

Sternly the pale children

march on

Bearing high on their hands. Father and Mother

The drums roll until the Land quivers with And slowly yawns: The children prone bow down They bow and kneel and lie; They lay within the earth s deep breast The beautiful young mother and her mate. Straight

pain

up from endless depths

Rise then the Bearers of the Pall

Sacco and Vanzetti, old John Brown and Willie McGee.

They raise the crucified aloft. The purple curtains of Death unwind. Hell howls. Earth screams and Heaven weeps. High from above its tears Drops down a staircase from the Sun Around it with upstretched hands. Surge of triumph and dirge of shame. Gather the mighty Dead:

Buddha, Jesus,

Mahmoud

and

Isaiah

Lincoln and Toussaint

Savonarola and Joan of Arc;

794

The Rosenbergs

And

all

the other millions,

In throng

on throng unending, weeping,

With music

And

singing.

rising heaven-high.

bugles crying to the sky

With trumpets, harps and dulcimers; With inward upward swell of utter song.

Then through

their ranks, resplendent robes of silken velvet,

Broidered with flame,

float

down;

About the curling gown Drop great purple clouds, burgeon and enthral. Swirl out and grandly close, until alone

Two

golden

feet appear.

As of a king descending In the great silence

We

to his throne.

and embracing gloom.

the murderers

Groan and moan;

“Hope

of the Hopeless

Hear us pray! America the Beautiful, This day! This day!

Who was enthroned in sunlit air? Who has been crowned on yonder stair? Red Resurrection,

Or Black

Despair?”

795

1

On

Stalin

Joseph Stalin was a great man; few other his stature.

pondered

He was

his

men

of the 20th eentury approaeh

simple, ealm and courageous.

problems slowly, made

He seldom

his decisions clearly

and

lost his poise;

firmly; never

yielded to ostentation nor coyly refrained from holding his rightful place

with dignity.

He was

the son of a

serf,

without hesitation or nerves. But also greatness

— he

knew

the

but stood calmly before the great

— and this was the highest proof of his

common man,

felt his

problems, followed his

fate.

man of conventional learning; he was much more than that: he was a man who thought deeply, read understandingly and listened to wisdom, no matter whence it came. He was attacked and slandered as few men of power have been; yet he seldom lost his courtesy and balance; nor did Stalin

he

let

was not a

him from his convictions nor induce him which he knew were correct. As one of the despised

attack drive

positions

man, he

first set

nation out of

its

to

surrender

minorities of

Russia on the road to conquer race prejudice and

make one

140 groups without destroying their individuality.

His judgment of men was profound.

He early saw through the flamboyance

and exhibitionism of Trotsky, who fooled the world, and especially America. The whole ill-bred and insulting attitude of Liberals in the U.S. today began with our naive acceptance of Trotsky’s magnificent lying propaganda, which he carried around the world. Against it, Stalin stood like a rock and moved neither right nor instead of the

left,

as

he continued

sham Trotsky

to

advance toward

a real socialism

offered.

Three great decisions faced

power and he met them magnificently: first, the problem of the peasants, then the West European attack, and last the Second World War. The poor Russian peasant was the lowest victim of tsarism, capitalism and the Orthodox Church. He surrendered the Little Wliite Father easily;

he turned

clung tenaciously Stalin risked a

From

Stalin in

but perceptibly from his ikons; but his kulaks capitalism and were near wrecking' the revolution when

less readily

to

second revolution and drove out the

the National Guardian,

March

16, 1953.

796

rural bloodsuckers.

On

Then came

Stalin

intervention, the continuing threat of attack by

all

nations,

halted by the Depression, only to be re-opened by Hitlerism. It was Stalin who steered the Soviet Union between Scylla and Charybdis; Western Europe and the U.S. were willing to betray her to fascism, and then had to beg her aid in the Second World War.

vengeance

for

A

lesser

man

than Stalin would have

Munich, but he had the wisdom

to ask only justice for his

fatherland. This Roosevelt granted but Churchill held back.

Empire proposed first to save itself Hitler smashed the Soviets. The Second Front dawdled, but

in Africa

demanded

The

British

and southern Europe, while

Stalin pressed unfalteringly ahead.

He

smash the dictatorship of Hitler and Mussolini. After Stalingrad the Western World did not know whether to weep or applaud. The cost of victory to the Soviet Union was frightful. To this risked the utter ruin of socialism in order to

and the sacrifices. For arises the deep worship of

day the outside world has no dream of the hurt, the his calm, stern leadership here,

if

nowhere

by the people of all the Russias. Then came the problem of Peace. Hard

else,

loss

Stalin

as this

was

to

Europe and America,

harder to Stalin and the Soviets. The conventional rulers of the the world hated and feared them and would have been only too willing to see fear of Japan and utter failure of this attempt at socialism. At the same time the it

was

far

Asia was also real.

Diplomacy therefore took hold and

Stalin was picked as the

conference with British Imperialism represented by and with the vast wealth and potential its trained and well-fed aristocracy; power of America represented by its most liberal leader in half a century. He Here Stalin showed his real greatness. He neither cringed nor strutted.

victim.

He

was called

in

of Roosevelt never presumed, he never surrendered. He gained the friendship He and the respect of Churchill. He asked neither adulation nor vengeance. essential, he was was reasonable and conciliatory. But on what he deemed of Nations, which had inflexible. He was willing to resurrect the League though Japan was insulted the Soviets. He was willing to fight Japan, even to the British then no menace to the Soviet Union, and might be death and to American trade. But on two points Stalin was adamant:

Empire it Clemenceau^s ^^Cordon Sanitaire must be returned to the Soviets, whence before had been stolen as a threat. The Balkans were not to be left helpless and exploitation for the benefit of land monopoly. The workers Western

peasants there must have their

say.

the Such was the man who lies dead, still the butt of noisy jackals and of In life he suffered under illbred men of some parts of the distempered West. decisions on his continuous and studied insult; he was forced to make bitter man stands in own lone responsibility. His reward comes as the common

solemn acclaim.

797

The Real Reason Behind Robeson’s Persecution

The

persecution of Paul Robeson by the government and people of the

United States during the ible

happenings

in

last

modern

nine years has been one of the most contempt-

history.

Robeson has done nothing to hurt or defame this nation. He is, as all know, one of the most charming, charitable and loving of men. There is no person on earth who ever heard Robeson slander or even attack the land of his Yet he had reason to despise America.

He was

birth.

man; the son of black folk whom Americans had stolen and enslaved. Even after his people s hard-won and justly earned freedom. America made their lot as near a hell on earth as was possible. They disa black

They sneered

couraged, starved and insulted them.

at helpless

black chil-

dren.

Someone once said that the best punishment for Hitler would be to paint him black and send him to the United States. This was no joke. To struggle up as a black

boy

in

America;

to

meet

jeers

and blows;

meet

to

insult with silence

and discrimination with a smile; to sit with fellow students who hated you and work and play for the honor of a college that disowned you — all this was America for Paul Robeson. Yet he fought the good fight; ‘‘He was despised and rejected of men; a

of sorrows and acquainted with grief and

we hid as

He was despised and we esteemed Him not.” Why? Why? Not because he attacked this

it

w'ere our faces

man

from Him;

country. Search Britain and

France, the Soviet Union and Scandinavia for a word of his against America. What then was his crime? It

was that while he did not

and he did From

that because

it

rail at

treated

America he did

him

like a

the National Guardian, April 7, 1958.

798

praise the Soviet

man and

Union;

not like a dog; because

The Real Reason Behind Robesons Persecution

he and

his family for the

and he was honored

first

time in

like a great

were welcomed

life

greeted him; the state

His eyes were

filled

human

beings

man.

children of Russia clung to him, the

The

like

named mountains

women

after

him.

kissed him; the workers

He

loved their homage.

with tears and his heart with thanks. Never before had he

received such treatment. In

America he was

a “nigger”; in Britain

he was

tolerated; in France

he was

cheered; in the Soviet Union he was loved for the great artist that he is. He loved the Soviet Union in turn. He believed that every black man with blood in

would with him love the nation which first outlawed the color line. saw him when he voiced this. It was in Paris in 1949 at the greatest rally for

his veins I

world peace

this

world ever witnessed.

Two thousand

persons from

all

the

Robeson hurried in, magnificent in height and breadth, weary from circling Europe with song. The audience rose to a man and the walls thundered. Robeson said that his people

world

filled

the Salle Pleyel from floor to

wanted peace and “would never thousands

rafters.

fight the Soviet

Union.

I

joined with the

in wild acclaim.

In Babylon, dark Babylon,

the

modern breed

seized the

chance

of newspaper prostitute

“who

take the

wage of shame

to

grovel to their masters the blood

upon

their

mood

pen

assigns their souls to servitude

Yea and the souls of men.

This, for America, was Robeson’s crime.

He might hate anybody. He might

murder around the world. He might lie and steal. But for him to against it — declare that he loved the Soviet Union and would not join in war join in

was the highest crime that the United States recognized. For that, they slandered Robeson; they tried to kill him at

that

him from hiring halls in which to and refused him a passport. His college

prevented

sing; they

travel

lied

Peekskill; they

prevented him from

about him and dishonored

him.

And above

all,

of their greatest

his

own

artists



people, American Negroes, joined in hounding one not all, but some like those who wrote of Negro



Robeson who more musicians and deliberately omitted Robeson’s name over the civilized than any living man has spread the pure Negro folk song world.

799

The Cold War

Yet has Paul Robeson kept his soul and stood his ground.

honors the Soviet Union. faith in

Still. he

has hope for America.

Still

he loves and

he

asserts his

God. But we — what can we say or do but hang our heads

in endless

Still

shame? As we celebrate the Delhi,

sixtieth birthday of Paul

Robeson from Moscow

to

New

New York to California and Accra to Johannesburg, we can all take our

stand and sing with him:

Out of the

night that covers

me

black as the pit from pole to pole, I

thank whatever gods

For

my

unconquerable

800

may soul.

be

Acknowledgments

Grateful acknowledgment assistance

W.

E. B.

and

Du

is

made

to the following for

to Allison Lillian

Lewis

for

her valuable

permission to reprint copyrighted works by

Bois:

Clark Atlanta University: “Apology,” Phylon, International Publishers

biography ofW. E. B.

Decade of Us

First

Company,

Du

Bois:

First Quarter, 1940.

and David Graham Du Bois: The AutoSoliloquy on Viewing My Life from the Last

Inc.,

A

Century, copyright 1968.

Slave Trade to Kraus International Publications: The Suppression of the African 1954; The Philathe United States of America, 1638-1870, copyright 1896, Folk, copyright 1903, delphia Negro, copyright 1899, 1973; The Souls of Black

copyright 1920; The Gift of 1953; Darkwater: Voices from Within the Veil, An Essay Toward Black Folk, copyright 1924; Black Reconstruction in America: a History of the Part

Which Black Folk Played

in the

Attempt

to

Reconstruct

Dawn: An Democracy in America, 1860-1880, copyright 1935, 1963; Dusk of Color and Essay Toward an Autobiography of a Race Concept, copyright 1940; copyright Democracy: Colonies and Peace, copyright 1945; In Battle for Peace, 1952.

People: Articles published National Association for the Advancement of Colored in

The

The

Crisis,

1910-1934.

University of North Carolina Press:

gram,” reprinted from copyright 1944 by

The

What

the

“The Third Modification of

My

Pro-

Negro Wants, edited by Rayford W. Logan,

University of North Carolina Press.

801

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